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PM rubbishes 'cash-for-votes' charges in Parliament

'I leave it to the good sense of the House to decide for itself if the report of Parliament's inquiry committee substantiates wild allegations,' said Singh.

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Rejecting as "wild" the charges that bribe was paid during the 2008 confidence motion, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh took on the opposition for creating hue and cry over diplomatic communications, saying it was a "dangerous" thing to do.

In an uncharacteristic combative manner, Singh particularly targeted LK Advani, saying the BJP leader thought becoming prime minister was his "birth right" and hence had never "forgiven me". He asked Advani to wait for three-and-a-half years for his chance.

Replying to a short duration debate in both Houses of Parliament over his statement on the WikiLeaks documents, first accessed by The Hindu daily, Singh said the government could not verify the authenticity of correspondence between the US embassy in Delhi and its government in Washington.

Referring to the probe by a Parliament's committee in 2008 into allegations of 'cash-for-votes' scam, the prime minister said it had concluded that there was insufficient evidence to prove that money was paid to purchase MPs.

"I am convinced that taking the report as a whole, this is a correct inference," Singh said, winding up the debate during which he came under sharp attack from the opposition which even questioned why he continued to be the prime minister if was "not aware" of developments involving his government.

"I leave it to the good sense of this House to decide for itself whether the report of the Committee in any way substantiates the wild allegations levelled by some hon'ble members of the opposition," Singh said amid thumping of desks.

Raising questions over the authenticity of the American correspondence mentioned in the WikiLeaks website, the prime minister warned that believing in a communication sent by some official in an ëmbassy was a "dangerous thought".

He maintained that nobody from the Congress or the government was involved in any "transaction" during the 2008 confidence motion and neither had anybody been authorised to engage in any such transaction.

Singh also had a couplet-for-couplet reply to Swaraj who had questioned why the prime minister was saying he was unaware about developments in his government.

"Mana ki tere deed ke kaabil nahi hoon main, tu mera shauk dekh, mera intezar dekh (I admit that I am not worth your attention but appreciate my interest and my patience)," the prime minister said in Urdu.

He was responding to Swaraj's Urdu couplet -- "Na idhar udhar ki tu baat kar, ye bata ki kaafila kyun luta. Hamein rahjano se gila nahi, teri rahbari ka sawal hai (don't talk about this and that, tell us why the caravan was looted. We have no complaint with the passersby, it is a question of your leadership)".

After Singh's reply in the Lok Sabha, the NDA staged a walkout, apparently dissatisfied with his reply.

Earlier, a united opposition mounted attack on the prime minister, asking how he could wash his hands of the 'cash-for-votes' scam and questioning why he continued to remain in the post if he was unaware of developments involving his government.

Swaraj asked Singh that as head of the government he should take responsibility instead of making others scapegoat for the omissions and commissions of his regime.

 "It is the habit of the prime minister to blame others. If it is price rise then (agriculture minister) Sharad Pawar is responsible, if it is 2G then (former telecom minister) A Raja is responsible and if it is Commonwealth Games then (Suresh) Kalmadi is to blame," she said.

"'I don't know anything, I am not aware of anything, there are coalition compulsions and I am not that much guilty as I am made out to be' ...the people are fed up with such excuses. They are asking why you are the prime minister," she said participating in the discussion.

Initiating the discussion on the Prime Minister's statement on the WikiLeaks expose in the 'cash-for-votes' scam, CPI leader Gurudas Dasgupta accused Singh of resorting to "parliamentary piracy" to win the vote of confidence in 2008 and demanded that he come clean.

He said the report of a parliamentary panel on the scam had clearly recommended "investigation by an appropriate agency" into the alleged attempts to purchase votes to win the trust vote on the Indo-US civil nuclear deal.

"It's a case of parliamentary piracy because some members were hijacked. The suspicion is that organised group of political gangsters were at work," he said.

Dasgupta's remarks terming the alleged scam as an act of "parliamentary piracy" and the handiwork of "organised groups of political gangsters" drew an angry retort from the ruling benches.

Parliamentary affairs minister Pawan Kumar Bansal pointed out that the CPI leader was speaking the language of the BJP. At this, Dasgupta said the two parties could be having convergence of views on some issues but that did not mean that they had joined hands.

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