Last Updated: Monday, April 13, 2015 - 18:43
Sena view unacceptable, committed to defending rights of all Indians: Venkaiah Naidu | Zee News
New Delhi: Taking a strong stand against the call by its ally
Shiv Sena for the scrapping of Muslims' voting rights, the government on Monday said
such suggestions were not acceptable to it and that these "should not be discussed even hypothetically".
Minorities, including Muslims, are as much the citizens of our country as anybody else and "there can't be any differentiation on any ground," Parliamentary Affairs Minister M Venkaiah Naidu said.
"The suggestion to deny such rights to anybody on any grounds is not acceptable to our government," he said.
"Such suggestions or purported suggestions should not be discussed even hypothetically since the same is not acceptable and such suggestions are not allowed under the Constitution," he added.
An editorial in Sena mouthpiece 'Saamana' has evoked sharp reactions from political parties which accused the party of trying to stoke communal passions and divide the people.
As the statement draws fire, Naidu further said,
"It is unfortunate that some political parties are used to vote bank politics, which only harms the sections they pretend to be protecting."
The minister said it was time that such politics was abandoned in the interest of the country.
"People, institutions and organisations functioning in our constitutional scheme of things should avoid making such controversial remarks as they will not help the cause of building an inclusive and resurgent India," he said.
Naidu said that political parties should inform, educate and enable people to vote driven by larger developmental concerns and not on the basis of narrow sectarian considerations.
Reacting to the view expressed in the said editorial by Sena MP Sanjay Raut that Muslims should be disenfranchised as the community is often used for vote-bank politics, Naidu said, "We are committed to defending and upholding all the rights given to our citizens under the Constitution."
PTI