Congress MP Rao Inderjit Singh, who had come under fierce attack from his colleagues after he demanded probe into allegations of shady land deals against Robert Vadra, today hinted at parting ways from the party.
"Plans will unfold with time. You will have to wait and see," Singh told reporters here when asked if he plans to quit the party.
On Congress' dismissal of his demand for a probe into allegations against Vadra, the son-in-law of party president Sonia Gandhi, he said it was "Congress' business and he did what he had to".
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Singh said he has called a meeting of his supporters on September 8 in connection with martyrdom rally at his home town Rewari on September 23.
He also said Haryana Insaf Manch, an apolitical organisation which was floated by him recently, would never metamorphose into a political entity.
Singh had last month demanded an inquiry into allegations of change of land use from agriculture to commercial or residential in Haryana and said anybody who has made money illegally, even if it is Robert Vadra, should he held accountable.
"I feel the administration has not functioned the way it ought to have...I'm not in the business of prosecuting Robert Vadra...I'm in the business of seeing that land in my constituency if anybody has made money illegally, they should all be held accountable and if that includes Robert Vadra, he should be held accountable as well," he had said.