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LS to discuss PM's remarks under Rule 184 today
By Javed M. Ansari
NEW DELHI, DEC. 12. The six-day standoff in Parliament between
the Government and the Opposition over the Prime Minister, Mr. A.
B. Vajpayee's statement on the Ayodhya issue ended today, with
both sides agreeing to a discussion under Rule 184 in the Lok
Sabha. The resignations of the three chargesheeted Ministers and
Mr. Vajpayee's statement will be discussed tomorrow, while the
Prime Minister's reply, in the form of an intervention, and
voting will take place on Thursday.
The back-off by both sides, followed an agreement hammered out in
the chamber of the Lok Sabha Speaker, Mr. G. M. C. Balayogi, this
afternoon. Accordingly, an amended motion, prepared with the help
of the Lok Sabha Secretariat, and incorporating the two issues -
the resignations of the three Ministers and the issues arising
out of the Prime Minister's attempt to exonerate them - would be
discussed under Rule 184.
At a meeting this morning of floor leaders convened by Mr.
Balayogi, the two sides got down to work to arrive at a workable
solution. Earlier, in the CPI(M) leader, Mr. Somnath Chatterjee's
room, the Opposition managed to narrow down its differences and
favoured a discussion under Rule 184. The Samajwadi Party's Mr.
Mulayam Singh Yadav appeared to have agreed to drop his demand
for a discussion on the Prime Minister's statement.
The Government too seemed to be easing off with the Parliamentary
Affairs Minister, Mr. Pramod Mahajan, indicating a willingness
for a discussion, but with a rider that the Prime Minister first
be allowed to make a statement and the Opposition to follow with
its motion. The Opposition promptly rejected the proposal and the
issue was once again deadlocked. Mr. Mahajan then promised to get
back after speaking to the Prime Minister.
With the House adjourned within minutes of assembling, the two
sides met in the Speaker's room at 12.30 p.m. At the meeting,
where Mr. K. Yerran Naidu of the TDP and the MDMK's Mr. Vaiko
were present, the Government came around to the idea of a
discussion under the Rule 184. The motion, whose draft version
was broadly agreed upon, is likely to focus on the Ministers'
resignations and seek the House's disapproval of the Prime
Minister's statement attempting to exonerate the three Ministers
- Mr. L. K. Advani, Dr. Murli Manohar Joshi and Ms. Uma Bharti.
The Speaker's office received 54 notices, 45 of them from the
Congress and the rest from the CPI(M), SP, BSP, and the AIADMK.
Tomorrow's motion would be decided by a draw of lots. In case of
a Congress member being given the chance to move the motion, it
would done by Mr. S. Jaipal Reddy, who incidentally was the first
to file notice for a discussion under Rule 184.
`Opposition unity helped'
Emerging from the meeting, Mr. Balayogi said, ``I am happy we
have reached an agreement and the House can now resume normal
business from tomorrow.'' The Congress Deputy Leader in the Lok
Sabha, Mr. Madhavrao Scindia, refused to view it as a defeat for
the Government and said what was paramount that ``democratic
principles had been strengthened''. The party chief whip, Mr.
Priyaranjan Dasmunshi, said the unity ``displayed by the entire
Opposition'' helped its view prevail.
The Government, on its part, said it was prepared for a
discussion under any rule decided by the Speaker. Mr. Mahajan
pointed out that it served the BJP fine to get the issue of the
three Ministers discussed in the House. ``Once the House gives
its approval by voting in our favor, it will be a stamp of
approval for the Ministers and nobody can dare raise it again.''
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