Congress demands Yediyurappa's resignation

Abhishek Singhvi
x

Congress spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi 

Highlights

The Congress accused Karnataka Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa of corruption on Wednesday and demanded his immediate removal, while questioning the silence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the top BJP leadership for not acting against him

New Delhi: The Congress accused Karnataka Chief Minister B.S. Yediyurappa of corruption on Wednesday and demanded his immediate removal, while questioning the silence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the top BJP leadership for not acting against him.

Congress spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi cited a Karnataka High Court order in which the court made some strong remarks against the chief minister while dismissing his petition to junk an old case of corruption against him. The Congress leader alleged that Yediyurappa has been delaying the investigation of graft charges against him in the case and accused the BJP leadership of being complacent in the acts of corruption.

"Karnataka and corruption seem to go hand in hand and are intertwined, and there is culpable conspiratorial silence of all the powers that be, including our extremely eloquent prime minister, BJP president J.P. Nadda and the party's former chief, Amit Shah. All of them maintain silence on this very special arc of immunity accorded by the BJP to B S Yediyurappa, the sitting chief minister of Karnataka. It is mysterious, inexplicable and shocking," Singhvi told reporters.

"The Congress, with all the force at our command, calls for the immediate resignation, removal, stepping down of the chief minister, but knowing full well that it will not happen," he said. Singhvi said he had referred to the case in October also while citing the example of tapes and WhatsApp messages of contractors talking of bribes paid in connection with the Rs 662-crore apartments complex project in Bengaluru.

"You only received an eloquent silence from the powers that be when we asked for B S Yediyurappa's resignation then," he added. The Congress leader referred to a 20-page judgment delivered by the Karnataka High Court on Tuesday in an old case under the Prevention of Corruption Act against the chief minister and other accused and said Yediyurappa himself was the petitioner in the case, which the court dismissed after using some strong language. The court questioned the Lokayukta police and the state apparatus on how they allowed a person to remain not even under investigation with the probe not proceeding at all for five long years from early 2015 till the end of 2019. Singhvi read out portions of the high court judgment that states, "Though I will not give a finding that the Lokayukta police has succumbed to the pressure of the chief minister, yet the Lokayukta police, being an independent, impartial body and trusted with the duty to investigate into the misconduct of public servants objectively, cannot give rise to an impression in the mind of the general public that it is playing into the hands of political bigwigs.

I refrain from making strong comments against the Lokayukta police, but laxity in conducting the investigation is deprecated and the Lokayukta police is directed to keep a watch over the investigation order." The Congress leader said there cannot be stronger words than these used by a court against a sitting chief minister. "The chief minister should not remain even for a single minute in the chair after this strong indictment by the high court," he said, adding that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is playing shameless politics and it will neither remove Yediyurappa nor will he resign.

The Congress leader said one now understands the game Yediyurappa, the BJP and the Karnataka government have been playing by not allowing the investigation to start and wait for an opportune moment to challenge the petitions in court. "The bottom line is simple, never let the judgment day come, never let the results to follow, let time take its own course and solve matters on its own," he said. Singhvi also cited the words of former deputy prime minister LK Advani, who had said Yediyurappa was not thrown out of the BJP, but he went of his own and formed his outfit when it became apparent that he was unabashedly indulging in corruption. "Those who give us sermons and advice should follow at least their own senior leader's advice," he said. In a tweet, Congress's chief spokesperson Randeep Surjewala cited a media report and said, "Does CM Yediyurappa have any right to continue in office even for whiff of a second after such stinging indictment?" "For a fair investigation and logical conclusion, CM must quit without delay. Test of PM Modi now of his promise - NA KHAUNGA, NA KHANE DOONGA."

Show Full Article
Print Article
Next Story
More Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENTS