Opposition Congress today requested Chhattisgarh Governor not to give assent to 16 bills passed by the state Assembly, saying that they were rushed through the house without any discussion with the opposition MLAs.
Congress also sought action from the Governor on Speaker Dharamlal Kaushik's decision to expunge parts of speeches of its legislators, which were made while paying homage to the Congress leaders killed in the Maoist ambush in Bastar in May.
A delegation of Congress MLAs, led by the Leader of Opposition Ravindra Choubey, met Governor Shekhar Dutt and handed him a memorandum.
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"The state government has passed such important bills without holding any discussion and without taking the opposition members into confidence. It is inappropriate and unparliamentary," the memorandum quoted Choubey as saying.
Major portions of the speeches made by Congress legislators during the obituary reference to the victims of the Darbha massacre were expunged by the Speaker, thereby disallowing publication of the remarks by media, it said.
The speeches by Ajit Jogi, Mohammed Akbar and Dharamjeet Singh were unnecessarily censored, the memorandum said, alleging that this was "administrative terrorism" and violation of freedom of expression.
Further, despite admitting to security lapses before the Darbha attack, no action had been taken by the BJP government, it said.