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Will abide by committee decision on future course: Ex-Haryana CM Hooda

Chandigarh: Former Haryana chief minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda, who has virtually threatened to part ways with the Congress ahead of the assembly polls, on Tuesday said he would abide by whatever decision a proposed committee decides for his faction.

Two days ago, Hooda had raised eyebrows by slamming the Congress' stand on scraping Jammu and Kashmir's special status, saying it had "lost its way" and was no longer the party it was before.

The infighting in the state Congress unit has intensified at a time when the assembly polls are barely months away.

At the rally in Rohtak on Sunday, the Congress leader had announced he would form a 25-member committee that would decide the future course of action for his faction, which has been demanding that he be made the state unit chief in place of Ashok Tanwar.

Talking to PTI over phone, Hooda said the committee would comprise 13 sitting legislators loyal to him, adding that most of the remaining members would be other party leaders from the state unit who are close to him.

"The names of all the committee members will be announced on August 23. It will be authorised to take any decision and I will abide by it," he said when asked what was his future course of action.

Reacting to it, state Congress president Ashok Tanwar, who has been at loggerheads with Hooda for quite some time, said the statements and actions of the former chief minister, including the decision to form a committee, were an "act of indiscipline".

"No one is above party. No matter howsoever tall a leader he may be, no one can violate discipline," said Tanwar, whose removal Hooda's faction has been demanding for a long time.

On the 25-member committee, Tanwar said it had no sanctity and cannot be formed, adding that constituting committees was the prerogative of the All India Congress Committee (AICC) or state unit.

Asked about his reaction to Tanwar's remarks, Hooda said: "I do not wish to make any comment on this. I have said what I had to say." At the rally in Rohtak, Hooda had promised several sops if he becomes the chief minister, seen as an open challenge to the party that is yet to name its candidate for the top post.

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