BJP, which has been opposing NCTC, today accused the Congress-led UPA
government of failing to provide leadership in fighting terror and asked it to
bring in a strong anti-terror law if it was serious on the issue.
"The Congress-led UPA is not providing the leadership to fight terrorism. We
cannot win over the fight against terror under UPA," BJP President Rajnath Singh
said in his inaugural address at the National Council meet, where he condoled
the loss of lives in the recent bomb blasts in Hyderabad.
Claiming that the proposed National Counter Terrorism Centre was against the
country’s federal structure, he said BJP was not against any laws to shore up
internal security but will not accept anything that "poses a question mark on
the nation’s federal structure".
"If the government brings a law to fight terror, BJP will support it," he said.
"If the government is so serious on the issue of terrorism that it wants to make
an anti-terrorism institution like NCTC at central level then why it is not keen
on enacting an anti-terrorism law at the Centre," the BJP chief questioned.
He said the one-sided effort which the UPA government made for friendship
despite not getting expected help from Pakistan projected the image of India as
a 'soft State'.
"As long as the government does not take a tough stand against terrorism, the
terrorists with their emboldened spirit would keep targeting cities, trains,
buses and other important institutions," Singh said.
The BJP also hit out at Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde for his 'Hindu terror'
remarks, saying they were made under a 'pre-planned conspiracy'.
"The remarks were made not by mistake but under a well-planned conspiracy,"
Singh said and accused the Congress of indulging in vote bank politics for the
last over six decades.
Shinde had later expressed regret over his remarks linking BJP and RSS to
terrorism, which he had made during an AICC meet in Jaipur in January, after
strong objections from these organisations.
The opposition party also charged the government with failing on the diplomatic
front while dealing with neighbouring countries.
He said India needs to maintain good relations with neighbouring Pakistan but
this has to be mutual.
"Pakistan is waging a multi-dimensional war with India through training to
terrorists, supply of weapons, smuggling of drugs, fake currencies and communal
propaganda on internet which may be called hybrid war," he said, adding that
"the government does not possess the will power to fight it."
Lamenting the lack of an "aggressive policy" against terrorism, Singh cited the
example of US President Barack Obama "who had said 'we will search you and
finish you' to Osama bin Laden after the World Trade Centre attack" and Israeli
Prime Minister who had declared "'we will hunt you down, we will annihilate you'
and responds aggressively against terrorist hideouts".
With Pakistan continuously waging a war against India by sponsoring terrorism
from across the border, Singh said India has not been talking tough and has
instead taken a stand that "we will not play cricket" whenever a terror attack
sponsored by Pakistan has taken place.
"The UPA government dealt a severe blow to India's fight against terrorism when
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh gave up his own policy of zero tolerance towards
terrorism in the wake of Mumbai attack in 2008 in the city of Sharm-el-Sheikh in
Egypt.
"UPA government bent its knees before Pakistan in Sharm-el-Sheikh and accepted
that Pakistan is also a victim of terrorism like India," Singh claimed.
While expressing concern over the growing "all weather friendship" between
Pakistan and China, he also raised the issue of construction of a dam on river
Brahmaputra by China and claimed it will "destroy" the entire North-East region.
Rajnath Singh alleged the Congress wanted to form a government by dividing the
nation on the basis of caste and religion.
"The Congress party has ruled the nation for 65 years by doing only vote-bank
politics. The BJP will form a government to build the nation," he said.
"Congress party is knowingly indulging in vote-bank politics by giving communal
colour to the issue of terrorism. Congress leaders have always been indulging in
the vote-bank politics at the cost of national interest," Singh alleged, adding
that "BJP is completely against giving any religious colour to terrorism."
Terming the issues of illegal immigration and internal security as serious,
Singh said "with fake currency to the tune of Rs 16,000 crore coming in", it
also posed a serious threat to the country’s economy.
Emerging story. Watch this space for updates as more details come in
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