Communist Party of India Marxist (CPI-M) General Secretary Sitaram Yechury on Thursday hit out at Prime Minister Narendra Modi, saying that citing partition to justify the National Register of Citizens, National Population Register and the Citizenship Amendment Act was a “travesty of the truth”. He also accused PM Modi of “discarding the sanctity” of parliament for “petty politicking” and said it was a sad day for democracy when it is done by a man “occupying the PM’s chair.”
None of the 70 year old quotes Modi has read says not giving shelter & citizenship to Muslims. His litany of untruths grows as his policies try to divide our people, destroy our social harmony through spread of hate & violence. https://t.co/RDnY0Wicdj
— Sitaram Yechury (@SitaramYechury) February 6, 2020
“Calling Opposition liars by quoting parliamentary speeches during Partition, the largest and most horrendous human transmigration in history, as justification for this unconstitutional CAA/NPR/NRC is a travesty of the truth. None of the 70-year-old quotes PM Modi has read says not giving shelter and citizenship to Muslims. His litany of untruths grows as his policies try to divide our people, destroy our social harmony through the spread of hate and violence,” Yechury tweeted.
PM Modi tore into the Opposition in marathon of combative speeches in the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha ahead of Assembly polls in the national capital, and said those rejected by people in elections are fuelling protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act and the National Population Register for their “vote bank politics”.
There is something called sanctity of an occasion, decorum of a place and basic decency of manner and choice of words. When all that is discarded for petty politicking by a man occupying the PM’s chair, it is a sad day for our democracy.
— Sitaram Yechury (@SitaramYechury) February 6, 2020
PM Modi was replying to the debate in the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha on the Motion of Thanks on the President’s Address. The Prime Minister delivered a stinging rebuttal to the Opposition over most issues its members raised to criticise his government and took on the charge that he pursued communal politics and wanted Hindu Rashtra.
Yechury also said peaceful protests are against any “division”, to protect the Constitution and the country’s unity and integrity. “Indians cannot be differentiated on the basis of caste, religion, creed, gender, colour, food they eat or job they do or who they choose to marry,” he said.
Slamming PM Modi for his comments that there have been statements by former Chief Ministers of Jammu and Kashmir “that are not acceptable to us”, Yechury said by “continuing to detain them for over 6 months, you are violating the very Constitution on whose oath you’re the PM”.
Attacking PM Modi for his reference to independence movement icon Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan, whose feet, the PM said he had the opportunity to touch when he was a child, Yechury questioned how he would have reacted to the 2002 Gujarat riots.
“Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan stood for communal amity and fought religious discrimination. When he came to Gujarat in 1969 after the riots there, he asked “How could it happen in the land of Mahatma Gandhi?” Compare this to what happened under Modi in 2002,” Yechury said.