Hoshiarpur Rape Case: Punjab Govt Acted Swiftly in Contrast to UP Govt in Hathras Incident, Says CM Amarinder Singh
On the 2018 Dussehra rail tragedy in Amritsar, Amarinder Singh said his government had provided immediate monetary relief but the matter now rested with the Railways, who would be giving the remaining relief to the victims and their families.
Patiala, October 25: Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Sunday asserted that his government had taken swift action in the Hoshiarpur rape-murder case in sharp contrast to the Uttar Pradesh government's response to the Hathras incident. He said the challan in this case will be presented in court this week.
The chief minister pointed out that prompt action had been taken by the Punjab Police and the accused had been caught without delay, unlike in the Hathras incident. Hoshiarpur Rape Case: Mob Attacks the Accused, Demands Police to Hand Them Over.
"That was why Rahul Gandhi had to rush to Hathras, to secure justice for the victim's family, and did not need to visit Hoshiarpur," he said while interacting informally with media persons here.
On Union Minister Nirmala Sitharaman's remarks on "selective outrage", he reiterated that had the Punjab government or police failed to respond with swiftness in the Hoshiarpur case, Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra and others would have reacted the same way as they did in the case of Hathras.
The CM on Saturday had hit out at BJP leaders Nirmala Sitharaman and Prakash Javadekar for their comments over the Hoshiarpur rape-murder case, dubbing their remarks as "political puffery" with no substance or basis to support their criticism.
The BJP had attacked the Congress on Saturday over alleged rape and killing of a six-year-old girl in Hoshiarpur, as it asked opposition party leaders Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra why had they not paid a visit to the family of the victim yet.
A six-year-old girl was allegedly raped, killed and then set on fire. Her half-burnt body was found at a house in a village in Tanda in Hoshiarpur on Wednesday.
Gurpreet Singh and his grandfather Surjit Singh were arrested on charges of murder, rape and other relevant sections of the Indian Penal Code and provisions of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, police had said on Thursday.
Replying to a question, the CM denied that Congress MLA Navjot Singh Sidhu has been sidelined in Punjab Congress. On the Enforcement Department (ED) summoning his son Raninder Singh in an alleged foreign exchange violations case, Amarinder Singh said it was not the first time the agency had issued summons to his family.
Ridiculing the Akali allegations of him being hand in glove with the central government on the farm laws issue, the chief minister said "everyone knows who is colluding with whom". "It is the Akalis who are mixed up with the BJP, they quit NDA under pressure but are still working together," he alleged.
Bathinda MP Harsimrat Badal was "clearly involved" in the introduction of the "anti-farmer" ordinances and was a cabinet minister at the time these were brought in by the Union government. "What did the Akalis do? My government brought the resolution/bills in Vidhan Sabha to reject the central laws," he added.
Pointing out that the fight was with the central government, Amarinder Singh reiterated his appeal to the farmers to stage 'dharnas' in Delhi and not in Punjab, where economic activity was being threatened by their blockade.
His ministers were in talks with farmer unions to resolve the problem, he said, pointing to the fact that only one day's coal stocks and 10 per cent urea were available with the state. The option to buy power from the national grid did not exist since the state had no money, he said.
To a question on the status of resolutions on farm laws in other states, the CM said there were 11 non-BJP state governments in the country and the Congress was in power in four states. All Congress governments would move similar resolutions against the central rules, he said, expressing hope that other non-BJP governments like that of West Bengal would also follow suit.
On the 2018 Dussehra rail tragedy in Amritsar, Amarinder Singh said his government had provided immediate monetary relief but the matter now rested with the Railways, who would be giving the remaining relief to the victims and their families.
To a question on the financial crisis in Punjabi University, the chief minister said the previous regime had indulged in haphazard recruitment, but assured that his government will find solutions.