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The Khurana affair
THE CRISIS THAT was brewing in the ruling BJP involving Mr. Madan
Lal Khurana may have blown over after the Prime Minister, Mr.
Atal Behari Vajpayee, agreed to talk to his estranged party
colleague. Mr. Khurana's sense of satisfaction over the outcome
of the hour-long meeting he had with Mr. Vajpayee and his
decision to desist from insisting on a discussion in the Lok
Sabha on the issues he had raised may have saved his party from
some serious embarrassment. The threatening noises from within
the ruling coalition, demanding that the Government roll back the
recent hike in prices of foodgrains and other commodities sold
through the Public Distribution System (PDS), have even otherwise
put Mr. Vajpayee and his Cabinet colleagues in a spot. And Mr.
Khurana could not have raised the banner of revolt at a worse
time than now. The truce, if one may describe the outcome of the
Vajpayee-Khurana meeting as such, must have helped the BJP
leaders heave a sigh of relief. Indeed, Mr. Khurana too could not
have had a better moment to pitchfork himself on to the centre
stage of events, in his own party and the ruling combine, than
the present context. And by raising the issues - that the PDS
prices be rolled back, the Sankhya Vahini project be kept in
abeyance by the Union Government and objecting to the list of
items on which import restrictions were lifted by the Union
Commerce Ministry - Mr. Khurana had managed to strike with some
effect at his adversaries in the party leadership.
But then, some of the questions raised by Mr. Khurana continue to
beg a satisfactory answer notwithstanding the truce within the
BJP. As for instance the point made by Mr. Khurana that the
Sankhya Vahini project is a threat to national security. Indeed,
the Sankhya Vahini project on the face of it is nothing more than
a framework to provide an infrastructure, through the telecom
network that is already there, for speedy transmission and
exchange of data. As it is, the idea behind this proposal
approved by the Union Cabinet in January this year is to build up
means to speedier transmission and exchange of data than what
exist today. And one does not find anything that could imperil
national security in this. However, the RSS leadership had
registered its protest against this project right at the time it
was conceptualised a couple of years ago. And the sangh leaders
were the first to cast a stone at it when Mr. Vajpayee's Cabinet
approved the proposal. It could be that Mr. Khurana was simply
echoing the same sentiments now with a view to endear himself to
those in the RSS; he must have felt this - making friends with
the RSS - necessary at least for tactical reasons. Indeed, Mr.
Khurana had once earlier (in January 1999) launched a tirade
against the swadeshi lobby and the RSS, charging them at that
time with scuttling the Government's functioning. Mr. Khurana had
resigned from the Union Cabinet then.
Be that as it may, the issues raised, particularly the charges
that the Government acted against the national interest while
deciding on lifting Quantitative Restrictions on the import of
1,429 items from the U.S. and the ``dangers'' to national
security if the Sankhya Vahini project was put through, are far
too serious to be ``settled'' within the party fora or among a
select group of leaders in the BJP. Mr. Khurana is bound, by
virtue of the fact that he is a member of the Lok Sabha, to
explain to the nation the basis on which he arrived at such
conclusions. There is no way that the BJP can treat these as
matters concerning only the party; similarly, Mr. Khurana too
cannot be allowed to use these issues to settle scores with
adversaries within the party. It is also important, now that the
Sankhya Vahini project has become the subject of such intense and
passionate debate, that the Union Government explain its current
stance.
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