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Rediff.com  » News » Where is intolerance? India will never be intolerant: Jaitley

Where is intolerance? India will never be intolerant: Jaitley

Source: PTI
November 03, 2015 14:50 IST
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Asserting that India will never be intolerant, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Tuesday rejected the Congress' pitch on the issue, saying opponents must fight political battles politically, and wondered "where is the intolerance".

Calling as "aberrations" some of the recent incidents including the beef row, Jaitley insisted that there is "no justification" in returning of awards and the national situation "is absolutely peaceful. India is fully committed as a liberal democracy to peaceful co-existence".

"There is an atmosphere of harmony. This country has never been intolerant and will never be intolerant," the Bharatiya Janata Party leader said.

He was replying to questions including about the protest march of Congress to President Pranab Mukherjee on the issue on Tuesday and the Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Contemporary Sciences holding a seminar with 'Leftist' intellectuals on the issue.

Stressing that "political opponents must fight political battle politically", the Finance Minister said that it is "not fair" to create an issue due to political reasons and then link it to government even when incidents of crime are happening in states ruled by other parties.

"Where is the intolerance? We are the most vibrant democracy. The atmosphere will not change only by talking. If some incident happens like the one in Karnataka, which is Congress-ruled, you cannot link it to the Central government to attack. That is not fair.

"This is a crime and action should be taken against whoever commits crime. That is why people in the mainstream in the country have opposed it," he said. The minister was speaking after unveiling the plans for the 46th International Film Festival of India.

The IFFI is being held in Goa between November 20 and November 30.

The BJP and the Congress have locked horns over the issue of "growing intolerance" in society, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday saying the Congress president had no moral right to lecture the National Democratic Alliance on tolerance and it should "hang its head in shame" for the 1984 anti-Sikh riots where thousands were massacred.

Congress chief Sonia Gandhi on Monday met President Mukherjee ahead of the proposed march by party leaders to Rashtrapati Bhavan on Tuesday to request him to invoke his constitutional powers to stem the "atmosphere of intolerance".

Jaitley also expressed confidence that the issue will have no impact on the IFFI.

"I do not see any reason why anyone should try and disturb any event in India. It's not a good practice. It's not a good principle," he said.

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