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PM gets a pat from the Sangh

September 05, 2015 02:35 am | Updated November 16, 2021 04:25 pm IST - NEW DELHI:

The conclave drew much flak from the Opposition which questioned the closed-door consultation between the government and the RSS.

RSS Sah-Sarkaryavah Dattatreya Hosbale and chief spokesperson Manmohan Vaidya addressing a press conference in New Delhi on Friday..

Prime Minister Narendra Modi topped the list of his Ministers who presented themselves at the RSS-BJP co-ordination meeting here on Friday, the last day of the three-day event and he was not disappointed with the RSS’ appraisal of his government, which Sarsanghchalak Mohan Bhagwat said was “very satisfactory.”

Mr. Modi delivered a 15-minute address at the meet attended by 93 delegates of RSS-affiliated organisations and almost his entire Council of Ministers, and the BJP’s Parliamentary Board.

“The Prime Minister said he was proud to be a Swayamsewak and that he had reached where he had because of the values he had imbibed as a member of the RSS,” said a source present at the meeting. The conclave drew much flak from the Opposition which questioned the closed-door consultation between the government and the RSS, a “socio-cultural organisation.” Congress’ deputy leader in the Rajya Sabha Anand Sharma termed the meeting “unconstitutional.”

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“The Prime Minister and his Council of Ministers take an oath under the Constitution that they won’t disclose their plans and policies with those who are not under constitutional oath,” he added.

The RSS countered this charge saying there was only an exchange of ideas and no official secrets were revealed.

Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi tweeted his rather strong views on the RSS-BJP ‘samanvay baithak’:

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Countering the Opposition charges, senior RSS office-bearer Dattatreya Hosabele said: “The Congress, which has run the government of this country by remote control, has no right to question us. We are not an illegal organisation, we are interested in certain issues. When people associated with us have become Ministers it is natural to have some exchange of ideas. Nothing has been divulged in these meetings which cannot be discussed by any organisation, like the CII or the Press Club.”

According to Mr. Hosabele, “this was not a chintan baithak where decisions were to be taken, but one where discussions on issues were held.”

He said the RSS was going to set up a committee to examine the figures revealed by the religious demographic census (2011) and was in favour of cultural ties with neighbours like Pakistan and Bangladesh who were “like our own brothers as they were once part of our country.”

Asked whether this included engaging with Pakistan, Mr. Hosabele said that “even Kauravas and Pandavas had to engage, and to establish dharma, we are ready to engage.” On the construction of a Ram temple in Ayodhya, he said the matter was in the hands of “Dharma Guru” and the RSS had not given any timetable to the government.

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