Jan Lokpal Bill Stuck with AAP Government, Says BJP

The BJP MLAs on Friday alleged that a file related to Jan Lokpal Bill has been stuck with the AAP government for the past nine months -- a claim that was not directly countered by the latter.

Manish Sisodia (photo Credit: PTI)

New Delhi, June 8: The BJP MLAs on Friday alleged that a file related to Jan Lokpal Bill has been stuck with the AAP government for the past nine months -- a claim that was not directly countered by the latter.

A strong Jan Lokpal Bill (an anti-corruption Bill) was one of the main planks on which the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) fought the election and came to power in Delhi.

Replying to the allegation, Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said the Central government sat on the Bill for around 21 months and after that, they raised the point whether the Delhi Assembly has the power to pass the Bill.

Three Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) legislators walked out of the House to register protest after their request for a reply on the Bill being allegedly stuck with the AAP government was turned down.

The MLAs then sat on a dharna outside Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal's office in the Assembly, seeking an apology from him on the issue. In a letter to Kejriwal, Leader of Opposition and BJP MLA Vijender Gupta and MLAs Manjinder Singh Sirsa and Jagdish Pradhan demanded that the file related to the Bill be tabled in the Assembly without any delay.

"You (Kejriwal) knew about all this. Despite this you are intentionally delaying it," the letter read.

Outside Kejriwal's office, Sirsa said: "The Bill is being delayed to save Satyendra Jain. We will fight for Jan Lokpal Bill and implement it. We will also bring down Kejriwal from power and send Satyendra Jain to jail."

The BJP legislators also made available a purported official history of the file related to the Bill, which showed that it was pending with the Delhi government as on Thursday.

The Jan Lokpal Bill was passed by the Delhi Assembly on December 4, 2015. Sisodia said that on August 23, 2017, the Centre said in a reply that the Central government's department concerned was looking into the Bill.

"However, the technical issue regarding the lack of competence of the Delhi Assembly needs to be further deliberated," the Central government's response said, according to Sisodia. He said the Bill would have come into effect in a month's time if Delhi was a full state.

(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Jun 08, 2018 06:41 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).

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