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Opposition to boycott GST inaugural in Parliament

Lalu Prasad's Rashtriya Janata Dal toed the Congress line, and said it would not be present in Parliament tomorrow.

New Delhi: The Congress on Friday said it would skip the government's June 30 midnight session for the launch of the Goods and Services Tax (GST), prompting more and more opposition parties to jump on the boycott bandwagon.

While the Congress, Trinamool Congress, RJD, Samajwadi Party and Left parties announced they would not attend the special celebrations announced by the government, the JD(U) said it would leave the decision to its MPs.

The Congress, in an all-out attack on the meet convened by the government, called it a “grand self-promoting tamasha (gimmick)” to gain publicity.

The party also accused the government of “insulting” India's freedom struggle, as the previous three midnight functions held in the central hall of Parliament were related to the country’s independence. This was a reason why it had decided not to attend the session, leaders said.

“The Congress party will not participate in the special midnight meeting on the implementation of the GST,” senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad asserted. The Trinamool Congress was the first to announce its boycott. But the JD(U) walked a tightrope, and said it had left the decision to its MPs, even as its two allies in Bihar announced they were staying away from the GST celebrations. The Nitish Kumar-led party, sources said, was earlier in support of attending the event, but was wary of further alienating its allies, the Congress and the RJD, since it had already created a rift in the bloc with its decision to support the NDA’s presidential candidate.

“It is just a reform measure. The way the government is projecting it as India’s economic liberation is very unfortunate,” JD-U spokesperson K C Tyagi said. He said the party supported the GST, but had left it to its MPs to decide whether they wanted to atte-nd the event. Azad took a potshot at the BJP, implying that it had little to do with India’s freedom movement.

While the Congress party “accords a lot of importa-nce” to the independence movement, the struggle may not be as significant for the BJP since “they had no role” in it, he said. He pointed out that midnight events in Parliament had been linked to India’s Freedom - the first was in 1947 to mark India’s independence, then in 1972 to commemorate its silver jubilee and in 1997 for 50 years of independence.

“The fundamental issue is that the celebrations are equated to the independence and its silver and golden jubilees. The GST session is an insult to the independence movement. We cannot support it,” Congress leader Anand Sha-rma told the media in the presence of party leaders Mallikarjun Kharge and Jairam Ramesh.

Lalu Prasad’s Rashtriya Janata Dal toed the Congress line, and said it would not be present in Parliament tomorrow. The Left parties, too, have opt-ed out, CPI leader D Raja said. “The Left will not participate in the midnight GST meeting. People are agitating across the county. There are serious apprehensions in the minds of people over GST’s implementation. We cannot ce-lebrate when people are agitating,” the Rajya Sab-ha member said. CPI General Secretary S Sudhakar Reddy said the party had taken this decision after discussions with its MPs. “They (the government) are doing this in a hurry without giving it proper time,” Reddy told PTI here. CPI(M) general secretary Sitaram Yechury said he would not attend the midnight meeting.

( Source : PTI )
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