Former Congress chairman Rahul Gandhi, who’s on a 10-day visit to the UK, is listed to deliver an address in the British Parliament demesne moment, sources said. Mr Gandhi’s visit has formerly ruffled feathers back in India, with the BJP criminating him of ‘defaming India’ abroad after his speech at Cambridge University, his alma mater. The Wayanad MP, still, hit back, saying it was Prime Minister Narendra Modi who did that by discrediting the country’s achievements since Independence.
Mr Gandhi will deliver an address in the UK Parliament in the Grand Committee Room of the Palace of Westminster on March 6, in order to ”embrace the artistic, social and business ties that bind both countries as the people are the living ground”. Clarifying that the speech would be in one of the “administrative commission apartments”, and not the chambers itself, Sharma developed that the real interest is to see “if the Congress party comes back into power, how they will deal with the unborn leaders and the unborn governments of Britain, especially when India and the UK both are unnaturally crucial abettors, popular, progressive and married to the rules grounded transnational order”.
Rahul Gandhi is set to conclude his UK stint this week with an address at the Chatham House supposed tank in London on geopolitical issues. “The reason is that our government simply doesn’t allow any idea of the Opposition, any conception of the Opposition to be bandied. The same happens in congress when there are important effects we need to speak about, like demonetisation, GST, the fact that the Chinese are sitting inside our territory, We aren’t allowed to raise them in the House,” he said. He also went on to reiterate that he was forced to take over his ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ because the institutions that cover republic and allow an expression of voice have been “captured by the BJP”.
The former Congress chief had also said he was under surveillance through the Israeli spyware Pegasus. He’d listed five crucial aspects of the alleged attack on Indian republic prisoners and control of the media and bar, surveillance and intimidation, compulsion by civil law enforcement agencies, attacks on nonages, Dalits and tribals, and shutting down of dissent.