06-06-2009, 01:52 AM
Jaitley: shun arrogance
Sandeep Dikshit
NEW DELHI: The new Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, Arun Jaitley, on Friday advised the government to shun arrogance and panic while charting the countryâs destiny over the next five years.
In his maiden speech as the Leader of the Opposition, he urged the government to be more consultative with political opponents and cautioned against the bumps that might appear in ties with the United States.
Arrogance and panic led to the U.S. travel advisory claiming that India faced a âhigh threatâ from terrorism, he argued while opening the Opposition salvo against the government on the Motion of Thanks on the Presidentâs address in the Rajya Sabha.
It all started due to the governmentâs arrogance which forced even those claiming a âhigh intelligence quotientâ to act in a partisan manner by refusing to hold the Indian Premier League tournament in the country. India could easily have hosted one match an evening instead of creating an atmosphere of ânational panic.â
âWe had cautioned the government that it should understand the consequences or it will be clubbed with Pakistan,â said Mr. Jaitley. It was because of this government-induced panic that the Australian tennis squad refused to play in the country. âThe government needs to realise that it must stop treating issues as purely partisan. It should rise to the occasion and not create panic.â
The BJP would support the government on terrorism if it departed from its occasionally soft stand and was totally committed to âzero tolerance.â
On ties with Washington, the BJP had repeatedly said it stood for close cooperation with the U.S. but was opposed to the nuclear deal being the only touchstone for bilateral ties. He saw three potential areas of divergence from the U.S. â the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, agriculture goods access negotiations in the World Trade Organisation and the issue of carbon emission norms in climate change negotiations.
He supported the governmentâs move to implement soon the one-rank one-pension scheme for the armed forces, thus conceding a long-standing demand from those âwho secure the country and deserve not to be treated in a discriminating manner.â
The Presidentâs address at certain places exaggerated the government performance, and the borrowing of a U.S. Presidentâs political phraseology to promise a ânew dealâ to the farm sector did not impress Mr. Jaitely due to the record number of farmer suicides in the past five years, irrigation woes, low remunerative prices and the lack of potable water and electricity.
Urging a proactive role in helping Sri Lankan Tamils, he wanted the government to examine the consequences of the Sethu Samudram project before âmindlessly sayingâ that it has the mandate to implement it. âRather than polarise society, the government must seriously examine new routes.â