Thursday 24 April 2014

Rahul Gandhi is lying to nation on Modi-Adani factor



The Pioneer Writes

By now it must be clear to the Congress that its persistent attack on Mr Narendra Modi over his so-called magnanimity to industrialist Gautam Adani has failed. 

Bharatiya Janata Party spokespersons have pointed out on more than one occasion that the allegation of Mr Modi gifting away land to the Adani Group is false; the land transfer being alluded to happened during Mr Shankersinh Vaghela's regime which was supported by the Congress. Mr Vaghela is today a prominent leader of the Congress. 

Moreover, the other, equally ridiculous charge that Mr Modi gave away the land at one rupee per acre (or hectare, nobody even in the Congress seems to be certain) has not been backed by evidence. Yet, Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi has made the accusation a pet theme in his election speeches. 

It is not selling — and not the least because his party itself has been accused of promoting crony capitalism through various scams such as the one that involved the awarding of 2G Spectrum licence and coal block allocations to business enterprises without following the due process of law. 

The Congress's emphasis on the ‘Adani factor' perhaps stems from its desperation to deflect the BJP's criticism of the questionable land deals that Congress president Sonia Gandhi's son-in-law Robert Vadra has been allegedly involved in. Mr Modi has repeatedly raised the matter in his campaign to drive home the point that members of the Nehru-Gandhi family have not just mismanaged the affairs of the country but also engaged in questionable business dealings. 

If, as the Congress alleges, there has been wrongdoing in the Gujarat Government providing land to the Adani Group through dubious means, it should have probed the issue. That never happened, because some allegations sound good to be levelled but not good enough to stand scrutiny. On the other hand, there is anecdotal evidence of Mr Vadra's land deals not being entirely clean. 

The shunting of intrepid IAS officer Ashok Khemka, who initiated a probe into Mr Vadra's deals in Haryana ruled by a Congress Government, is just one indication that all is not clean. There is no point in the Congress pointing to court verdicts that did not maintain petitions against Mr Vadra, because those rulings were on legal technicalities and did not really give a clean chit.

The Congress has been left holding the wrong end of the stick after Mr Modi candidly said in an interview recently that, while he openly lobbied for the State with industrialists, Congress leaders engaged them away from public scrutiny because they had dark secrets to hide. 

The question, therefore, is not whether a politician is close to the corporate world. It's whether those engagements are for the larger good of the people or to promote self-interests. 

Allegations that Mr Modi has been close to corporate India does not end with Mr Adani. Are we to believe the silly charge that corporates have been bought over lock, stock and barrel, by the prime ministerial candidate? Obviously, the Congress and other rivals of Mr Modi are on the wrong track. They must have realised it by now. But perhaps it's too late for them to change their strategy. Or maybe they just do not have anything substantial to hurl at Mr Modi.

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