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HomePoliticsPhotos of Modi, Union ministers taken down from govt websites, including PMO's

Photos of Modi, Union ministers taken down from govt websites, including PMO’s

The photographs were taken down since the model code of conduct was enforced, which means the ruling party cannot use its official position for campaigning.

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New Delhi: Following the imposition of the model code of conduct, several government websites, including that of the Prime Minister’s Office, have taken down pictures of the prime minister and other union ministers, but some ministries are yet to comply.

The Lok Sabha elections will begin from April 11 and the announcement of the date for polling means the Model Code of Conduct comes into immediate effect. It remains operational till the process is concluded.

The code states that the party in power – whether at the Centre or in the states – should ensure that it does not use its official position for campaigning.

Ministers and other government authorities cannot announce financial grants in any form. No project or scheme which may have the effect of influencing the voter in favour of the party in power can be announced, and ministers cannot use official machinery for campaign purposes.

In a letter written to the cabinet secretary and chief secretaries of states, the EC had asked them to ensure that photographs of “political functionaries” on official websites are removed or hidden immediately.

The PMO website took down pictures of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and so did the site of Press Information Bureau which disseminates government information to the media.

But the website of the Law Ministry still carries the pictures of Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, his junior minister P P Chaudhury and a link to PM’s ‘Mann ki Baat’ monthly radio address.

Same is the case with the website of Ministry of Minority Affairs where pictures of minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi and his junior minister Virendra Kumar are displayed.

Central and respective state government have been asked to remove all unauthorised political advertisements in the form of writings on walls, posters, hoardings, banners and flags from public property and public spaces such as airports, railway stations, bus stands, municipal buildings, government offices and buses within three days of announcement of poll dates.


Also read: Congress begins campaign for Lok Sabha polls from PM Modi’s home state Gujarat


 

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1 COMMENT

  1. After wasting hundreds of crores of public money during the last couple of months on full-page ads in leading papers (many cases taking 20% of space on a single day) and inaugurating the already inaugurated factories (read the Ordinance Factory in Amethi). A party with a difference and in incorruptible man. Our man has given us a new definition of corruption – when I spend public money for promoting myself, I am doing it for public good. I think our courts or the EC must ban putting photographs of politicians (of all colours) on government website or public assets. Why should a politician elected for a five year term be allowed to position himself above all of us and make us believe that he or she is problem to all our solutions – even when we know that the personal is corrupt and/or self-serving – in most cases both?

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