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Keith Vaz breaks silence, hits out at media
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, JAN. 27. With pressure mounting on him to disclose the
full extent of his connection with the Hindujas' passport affair
and even as it emerged that almost every prominent Minister met
the Hindujas at one time or the other, the Foreign Office
Minister, Mr. Keith Vaz, hit back alleging a touch of racism in
the way the issue was being pursued especially in the media. ``I
don't like this underlying hint of `should an Indian get a
passport?'' he retorted on Friday claiming that he was proud of
his links with the Hindujas and the Asian community.
His remarks came as the Government released names of its
Ministers and civil servants who have had contacts with the
Hindujas - and the list reads like Whitehall's who's who
including the Foreign Secretary, Mr. Robin Cook, his erstwhile
colleague and now Energy Minister, Mr. Peter Hain, the Trade and
Industry Secretary, Mr. Stephen Byers, and his colleague, Ms.
Patricia Hewitt. It is understood that Whitehall has been told to
come clean on its contacts with the Hindujas to avoid any more
controversies ahead of the general elections.
Mr. Vaz, MP from the predominantly-Asian city of Leicester, is
the Labour's most visible ethnic face and there was some concern
over what seemed liked an attempt by him to turn a corruption
scandal into a race issue. There was a view that he played just a
shade too much on his Asian background, with a hint that both he
and the Hindujas were being pursued because of the colour of
their skin. His reference to the fact that a White South African
athlete, Zola Budd, was given a British passport on a fast-track
basis without raising any eyebrows did not go unnoticed. ``No one
could lose the inference - Ms. Budd of course was a white South
African brought over to this country by the Daily Mail ,one of
the newspapers most in pursuit of Mr. Vaz,'' commented The
Independent.
Mr. Vaz, who had been avoiding the media for the past two days,
broke his silence yesterday and though he did not give a direct
reply to any of the nagging questions he was combative and
appeared remarkably confident of coming out squeaky clean from
the inquiry the Prime Minister has ordered. ``A lot of you will
look very foolish when facts come out,'' he said accusing the
media at one point of having written a lot of ``garbage'' about
Mr. Mandelson, who was forced to resign early this week for lying
about his role in influencing Mr. Srichand Hinduja's application
for citizenship.
Mr. Vaz, who was accosted by mediapersons outside the Indian High
Commission after a function, had only one explanation for his
close links with Hindujas and his role in the passport case: As a
prominent Asian politician he was obliged to take up the cases of
the Asian community - a line taken by the Prime Minister as well
to defend Mr. Vaz.
``I take on cases on behalf of a lot of members of the Asian
community. When I came to this country I was nine years old. My
first experience of dealing with an MP was to do with a race
issue and he was not prepared to take it on,'' he said. He denied
that he ever spoke to the Prime Minister about Mr. Srichand
Hinduja's passport, but declined to answer if he had written to
him or Mr. Mandelson.
Sir Anthony Hammond, QC, was looking into all the aspect and once
the inquiry was over he would be delighted to let the media
publish all his letters. The passport row has hit Mr. Vaz when a
parliamentary standards committee is looking into allegations
relating to his dealings with Asian businessmen, but the
committee is reported to have cleared him of most other charges.
The Opposition meanwhile, accused the Prime Minister of
prejudging the Hammond inquiry into the passport affair with his
statement that ``from the look of the papers I have seen I cannot
see anything wrong with what has been done.'' A Tory spokesman
said this showed that the inquiry could be a ``whitewash'' job.
``As always, Mr. Tony Blair wants it both ways. He's allowed to
prejudge the inquiry but no one else is allowed to ask or
scrutinise anything in Parliament (on the plea that an inquiry is
on),'' said Mr. John Redwood.
An official spokesman however maintained that there was no
question of hiding anything and the inquiry would address all the
issues raised by the affair.
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