He denied that Congress President Sonia Gandhi asked him to quit the post, adding that she understood the reasons he gave in his letter to the party to step down as in-charge of Punjab. “I called Rahul Gandhi and told him I am sending the letter...I read him the letter. He told me to send it to the Congress President...I called Sonia Gandhi and told her that this is in the interest of the party and we should not let them use this politics,” he said. Kamal Nath said Gandhi spoke with him again after she received the letter and told him that “well if this is your reason, fine.”
On being asked whether he was forced to step down as the in-charge after allegations over his role in the anti-Sikh riots resurfaced, the senior-most Lok Sabha MP wondered why the issue of his alleged role in the riots was being raked up after 32 years. He said the Nanavati Commission which investigated the anti-Sikh riots had absolved him. “It is nothing but a political ploy to divert from the real issues,” he said.
“There was an adjournment motion on which Akalis spoke, LK Advani of BJP spoke. No one pointed fingers at me,” he said. He claimed that the real issues affecting Punjab such as drugs, farmer plight, mis-governance are being ignored.
Responding to a poser on a letter reportedly written by his former Cabinet colleague MS Gill, Nath said he never raised the issue of 1984 riots with him when they were Cabinet colleagues nor in the Cabinet. Gill had on Wednesday described his appointment is akin “rubbing salt on wounds”.
Nath rejected suggestions that the Nanavati panel absolved him due to ‘lack of evidence’. He said the report should be read in its entirety. He said he was at the Rakabganj Gurudwara near Parliament House after he was told that a crowd had gathered here. He said policemen at the scene asked him to engage the crowd till reinforcements arrived. “I left as soon as I saw the reinforcements arrive,” he said.
Congress’ spokesman Anand Sharma dismissed suggestions that the party buckled under pressure to replace him and insisted that the “dishonest, perverse, and mischievous” narrative by opposition against him was done with an eye on elections. Punjab Congress chief Amarinder Singh also came out in Nath’s defence and said he respected his decision but it was sad that this row was raked up by rivals to harm the party.