NE NEWS SERVICE
NEW DELHI, SEPT 22
A number of opposition parties on Tuesday staged a walkout from Rajya Sabha and decided to boycott proceedings of the House till the suspension of eight members is revoked, even as the government insisted on their apology.
Among the parties that boycotted the proceedings of the House included the Congress, which was the among the first to walk out, followed by members of the CPI-M, CPI, TMC, NCP, SP, Shiv Sena, RJD, DMK, TRS and AAP.
Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha, Ghulam Nabi Azad, said they would boycott the proceedings till the suspension of members is revoked and also demanded that the government bring another bill to ensure that no private player should buy food grains from farmers below the MSP fixed by the government.
“I demand that the government brings another bill in the House which should ensure that no private player can buy food grains from farmers below the MSP. The government should also ensure that the MSP is fixed as per c2 formula under Swaminathan Committee and the should also ensure that all procurement done by central, state governments and FCI be not done below MSP.
“The colleagues who have been suspended for the rest of the session, their suspension be revoked. Till the government does these three things, we will boycott the session,” he said in the House while walking out.
Eight members of Rajya Sabha were suspended on Monday over their “unruly behaviour” during the passage of the two key farm bills on Sunday.
Azad also said members should get more time to speak and time constraint has become a major issue of discontent among opposition parties.
He said the sense of the House should not mean mere numbers, but by political parties, as 18 political parties are on one side demanding more time.
Maintaining that the voice of the opposition and rights of members are not heard and bills are not sent for scrutiny to Select Committee or Standing Committees, Azad said, “I think the day before yesterday was the last straw that broke the Camel”s back.”
The Congress leader said the government now wants “one nation, one market” with which they have no problem.
“The government earlier said ”one nation, one tax” and then ”one nation, one ration card”, but for God’s sake, don’t go towards ”one nation, one party”.”
Chairman M Venkaiah Naidu lamented that the chair has been dragged into the controversy and said members should not put the blame on the chair.
Naidu made a fresh appeal to members of all opposition parties to rethink their decision of boycotting proceedings and participate in discussions of the House.
“I appeal to all members to rethink their decision of boycott and participate in the discussion,” he said.
The Chairman said democracy is for debate, discussion and decision and not disruption.
He also lamented that the suspended members in an interview justified their action and showed no remorse.
Parliamentary Affairs Minister Pralhad Joshi said: “The government is not hell-bent upon keeping the suspended MPs out of the House”.
“If they express regret, the government will look into it,” he said on demands by some members that their suspension should be revoked and that the government should have a large heart.
Leader of the House Thaawarchand Gehlot said the suspended members tried to portray that it is the mistake of the Chair and not the opposition.
“This is not proper. Everyone is condemning that day’s incident and saying it is sad. LoP also termed it sad but he tried to prove it by saying against the Chair, that the chair had taken a wrong decision. This is not proper. I want to bring this on record. I have 35 years of parliamentary experience, have not seen such a sad incident in my life.
“Breaking mikes, sitting on the table, showing hands at Harivansh Ji, climbing on the table, tearing the rule book and bill”s copy. This is a condemnable and sad state of affairs. The LoP’s allegation on the chair is not justifiable. The Chair’s decision is supreme, its disrespect is not proper,” he said.
Former PM and JDS leader HD Deve Gowda said the government and Opposition should sit together to run the House.
Ram Gopal Yadav (SP) said, “A mistake has taken place by opposition members, but elders should be large-hearted. I urge that their suspension be revoked and I apologise on their behalf”.
K Keshava Rao (TRS) said whatever happened in the House is condemnable and “we are sorry for it”. Tiruchi Siva said opposition members got agitated after the chair did not allow division of votes.
Ram Chandra Prasad Singh (JDU) said, “What was their intention as they were tearing papers and throwing at Harivash babu. Division can happen only when there will be order. ”
They showed aggression towards Harivash, he said, adding “It is his (Harivansh) decency that no untoward incident took place. This is not good. They disobeyed, staged dharna as if fighting for the freedom of the country. This should not be forgiven.”.
Praful Patel (NCP) said his party has never entered the well or did anything which is not in the best parliamentary traditions.
“We maintain a certain decorum in the House. Whatever happened, though it is unfortunate”.
“In the best traditions of Parliamentary democracy…you could consider and withdraw the suspension. It will go a long way in building the trust deficit between the ruling and opposition side,” he said.
Those suspended include Derek O’Brien (TMC), Sanjay Singh (AAP), Rajeev Satav (Cong), KK Ragesh (CPI-M), Syed Nazir Hussain (Cong), Ripun Boren (Cong), Dola Sen (TMC) and Elamaram Kareem (CPI-M).
Pawar to fast for a day in solidarity with 8 suspended MPs
Meanwhile, in Mumbai, NCP chief Sharad Pawar said he is observing a day-long fast on Tuesday to protest the suspension of eight Rajya Sabha members of the Upper House.
The MPs were suspended for the remaining part of the current session over their “misbehaviour” with the House deputy chairman during the passage of the Farm Bills on Sunday.
Addressing a Press conference here, Pawar, a Rajya Sabha member, also bemoaned the conduct of Deputy Chairman Harivansh and the Modi government”s decision of “bulldozing” the Opposition in the House.
The eight MPs were expelled for expressing their opinion, Pawar said, adding the deputy chairman did not give priority to (House) rules.