Delhi violence: Congress leaders meet President, demand Amit Shah’s resignation

New Delhi: A Congress delegation, including party chief Sonia Gandhi, urged Thursday met President Ram Nath Kovind and asked him to call for Home Minister Amit Shah’s resignation over his alleged ‘abdication of duty’ during the communal violence in Delhi and remind the Centre of its ‘raj dharma’.

The delegation, including former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha Ghulam Nabi Azad, Ahmed Patel, P Chidambaram, KC Venugopal, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, Anand Sharma and Randeep Surjewala, also submitted a memorandum to the president over the wave of violence in Delhi.

Reading out parts of the memorandum before the media outside the Rashtrapati Bhavan, Sonia said that instead of taking remedies to diffuse the situation in Delhi, the Centre and the newly-elected Delhi government have remained ‘mute spectators’ to the violence. The violence has taken the lives of 34 people and businesses have fallen prey to looting, the Congress chief added.

The party also asked the president to call for the resignation of Home Minister Amit Shah over alleged ‘abdication of duty’ during the violence. Sonia said that Shah should have been in the national capital Monday instead of attending the ‘Namaste Trump’ event in Ahmedabad.

Congress leaders Sonia Gandhi and Manmohan Singh address the media after meeting President Ram Nath Kovind

Manmohan, in his remarks to the media, said the Congress leaders called upon the president to convey to him that what has happened in the last four days in the national capital is a matter of deep concern and national shame. He alleged that there had been a ‘total failure’ on the part of the central government to control the situation.

The Congress requested the President Kovind to remind the central government of its ‘raj dharma’, Manmohan informed.

In all this Rahul Gandhi was conspicuous by his absence. Congress leaders informed that he is out of the city and since he is not the Congress chief any more, it is not necessary for him to also be present in all matters.

Agencies

 

Exit mobile version