NEW DELHI: As turmoil-ridden Monsoon Session of Parliament ended, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today hit out at BJP for “total negation” of democracy and asked people to stand up against such attitude of disruption, warning that it would be a “grave violation” of Parliamentary politics.
He maintained that the CAG report on coal block allocation should have been discussed in Parliament and Public Accounts Committee but the Opposition chose to cause disruptions.
“We have just ended a wasted session of Parliament. Both the Houses were paralyzed because CAG has issued a report which rightly or wrongly has certain allegations about public functionaries,” Singh told reporters outside Parliament shortly after the end of Monsoon Session.
“We have great respect for the institution of CAG, but if we do respect this institution, we must be willing to debate its finding in PAC or even on the floor of Parliament which we have always been willing,” he said.
Without naming BJP, Singh said, “The Opposition chose not to take advantage of the subtle institutional practices dealing with the reports of CAG and insisted on disrupting Parliament. This is negation of democracy.”
He warned that “If this thought process is allowed to gain momentum it will be a grave violation of Parliamentary politics as we have understood.”
Parliament could work only on six out of 19 days of sittings because of BJP’s unrelenting demands for resignation of the Prime Minister over the coal block allocation issue besides cancellation of allotments and setting up of independent inquiry. . The Prime Minister said a paralyzed Parliament was a “total negation” of the functioning democracy that India is and appealed to the countrymen to stand up unitedly to allow functioning of such democratic institutions.
“I would like my countrymen and countrywomen to make up their mind if this is the right way to serve our functioning democracy. We take pride in the fact that since Independence, we have been a practicing and functioning democracy,” he said.
“What we have witnessed in this session is a total negation of that and all right thinking people in our country should stand up and unitedly come up in (one) voice that come what may, Parliamentary institutions must be allowed to function with the norms as we have known them since Independence,” Singh said.
He said Parliament was not allowed to discuss important issues facing the country like problems of rising communal tensions, regional and ethnic tension, terrorism, and Naxalism.
“Parliament should have debated these issues. Parliament was not allowed to discuss these important issues before the country,” he said.
Singh said the government was trying to prevent India getting affected by difficulties like recession faced by the global economy.
“Parliament should have discussed these issues. What is our economic strategy to deal with these global developments, Parliament was not allowed to do any of these things,” he said.
“The result is Parliament – a forum where we articulate our peoples’ felt needs and felt urges – was totally paralyzed,” Singh said. -PTI