Another Congress spat in the offing? Tharoor, Singhvi differ over British MP’s deportation
India

Another Congress spat in the offing? Tharoor, Singhvi differ over British MP’s deportation

While Shashi Tharoor criticised the government's decision to deport British MP Debbie Abrahams, Abhishek Manu Singhvi spoke in favour of it.

   
Tharoor-Singhvi

File photo of Shashi Tharoor (left) and Abhishek Manu Singhvi | Wikipedia

New Delhi: Senior Congress leaders Shashi Tharoor and Abhishek Manu Singhvi have taken opposing stands over the issue of British MP Debbie Abrahams being denied entry into India, sparking off talks about another public sparring in the party’s top leadership.

On Monday, Abrahams — who has been a critic of the Narendra Modi government’s move to scrap Article 370 in Jammu and Kashmir — was denied entry into India on arrival at the Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi as her visa was found to be “invalid”.

Hours later, Tharoor took to Twitter to say: “If things are fine in #Kashmir, shouldn’t the Govt encourage critics to witness the situation themselves to put their fears to rest? Instead of conducting tours for pliant MEPs &polite Ambassadors alone, surely the head of a ParliamentaryGroup on the subject is worth cultivating? (sic)”

 

On Tuesday morning, Congress leader Singhvi, however, tweeted in favour of the government’s decision.

“The deportation of Debbie Abrahams by India was indeed necessary, as she is not just an MP, but a Pak proxy known for her clasp with e Pak govt and ISI. Every attempt that tries to attack India’s sovereignty must be thwarted,” his tweet read.


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Knives out in Congress

Top Congress leaders have been sparring in the public in the last couple of days, especially after the party’s recent drubbing in the Delhi assembly elections.

A day after the election results were announced on 11 February, Delhi Mahila Congress President Sharmistha Mukherjee lashed out at senior leader P. Chidambaram on Twitter after the latter congratulated the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) for defeating the BJP in Delhi.

Mukherjee replied to Chidambaram’s tweet by asking if the Congress had “outsourced the task of defeating the BJP”.

 

On 16 February, union minister Ajay Maken and Milind Deora locked horns after the latter tweeted lauding Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and pointed out how Delhi’s revenues had doubled during the AAP’s last term.

 

To this, Maken reacted by saying: “Brother,you want to leave @INCIndia-Please do-Then propagate half baked facts!”

In Madhya Pradesh last week, it was Congress leader Jyotiraditya Scindia versus Chief Minister Kamal Nath. Reacting to Scindia’s threat of taking to the streets if the Madhya Pradesh government failed to fulfill its poll promises, Nath said the former was free to do so.


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