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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, December 10, 2000 |
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DMK against raising new issues on Ayodhya row
By Our Special Correspondent
CHENNAI, DEC. 9. The DMK, a partner of the BJP-led Central
Government, today expressed itself against any new issue being
raised regarding the Ayodhya temple row, as the NDA's ``National
Agenda for Governance'' had ``pledged to have a moratorium on
contentious issues''.
``Raising fresh issues now cannot be accepted,'' in the context
of controversial issues such as Ayodhya, uniform civil code and
deletion of Article 370 of the Constitution (conferring special
status on Kashmir) not finding a place in the NDA's common
agenda, the DMK president and Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, Mr. M.
Karunanidhi, said in a statement here.
Reiterating that the DMK would continue to protect the minorities
and be their ``affectionate friend as ever'', Mr. Karunanidhi
said the National Agenda had specifically called for putting an
end to divisiveness and being committed to ``reaching out to the
minorities,'' besides safeguarding their rights as enshrined in
the Constitution of India.
On the recent remarks of the Prime Minister, Mr. A.B. Vajpayee,
on the Ayodhya issue, Mr. Karunanidhi, without explicitly
referring to the former's statements, said the NDA's common
agenda had given a ``clear commitment'' to secularism - ``the
emotional harmony of all Indians and full protection of
minorities.''
``The NDA is secular. In the NDA, there are parties holding
different views. There should be a consensus on common issues and
thrusting a different point of view cannot be accepted,'' he
said.
The NDA's common agenda was the benchmark for all the allies and
it was also for sharing the hopes and anxieties of the people of
India, besides urging the minorities to ``hold hands and walk
together to build a resurgent, modern India,'' he said.
As far as the DMK was concerned, it held the ``same strong
feeling with which it condemned the demolition of the Babri
Masjid,'' in 1992. Taking a dig at some of the Opposition
parties, including the Congress, Mr. Karunanidhi said that those
who were in power at the Centre in 1992 were ``silent spectators
to the demolition while the Army was stationed close by.''
Those ``who spoke in support of the `kar seva' at the National
Development Council meeting (1991) and those who sent men and
material from here for the `kar seva' are now shedding crocodile
tears,'' Mr. Karunanidhi said in an apparent reference to the
AIADMK, which was then ruling the State.
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