New Delhi: Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge on Friday said his party will keep raising the Adani issue inside and outside Parliament and added that if the government does not work democratically, "people will get rid of it". Addressing a press conference at the Congress headquarters here, Kharge posed a set of 10 questions to the government on various issues, including a controversy involving the business group headed by industrialist Gautam Adani and the expunging of certain remarks made by party leader Rahul Gandhi and him in Parliament.
Alleging that the Adani "scam" is a huge one involving public money, he wondered why is the government reluctant to order a joint parliamentary committee (JPC) probe into it. Kharge said he had not said anything unparliamentary in his speech in the Rajya Sabha and only asked certain questions on the Adani issue. "Why is the Modi government not conducting a joint parliamentary committee probe into the allegations against the Adani Group? What is the reason behind (Prime Minister Narendra) Modiji and his government not even allowing (anyone) to raise the word Adani in Parliament?" he asked.
"Why are the RBI, the SEBI, the ED, the SFIO, the corporate affairs ministry, the IT (department) and the CBI paralysed? So many scams have happened and why are they still silent? They only see other people but not him (Adani)," the Congress president alleged. "Modiji is now using our Parliament like a washing machine to wash the scams of his friend," Kharge later alleged in a tweet in Hindi. He said it is the opposition's job to ask questions of the government. The people of the country have elected parliamentarians and it is their responsibility to protect people's money and rights and ask the government questions on the impact of scams on common people, he added.
"But they did not agree to the (formation of a) JPC nor allowed us to raise the issue in Parliament and that is why our people are agitated. "We will keep asking questions of the government in parliamentary democracy. But the government does not want to allow Parliament to function democratically and is talking of autocracy. If the government is not ready to work democratically and talks of autocracy and dictatorship, people will get rid of it," the leader of opposition in the Rajya Sabha said. "Shouldn't the falling value of the LIC's money, invested in Adani's companies, be questioned? Shouldn't questions be asked about the Rs 82,000-crore loan given to Adani by the SBI (State bank of India) and other banks? Shouldn't questions be asked as to why Rs 525 crore of the LIC and the SBI were invested in Adani's FPO, despite a more-than-32-per cent fall in Adani's shares? Shouldn't questions be asked as to why the value of the LIC's and SBI's shares fell by more than Rs 1 lakh crore in the stock market?" Kharge asked.