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Kejriwal attacks Modi, says he is no Rahul Gandhi
New Delhi, June 5
Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Friday described Narendra Modi
as "not a good prime minister", and said he cannot be compared with
Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi.
Kejriwal told NDTV in an
interview that Modi was using Lt. Governor Najeeb Jung to create
obstacles for his Aam Aadmi Party government to avenge the Bharatiya
Janata Party's rout in the February elections in Delhi.
"He
(Modi) is taking revenge against the people and the Aam Aadmi Party
because of the loss (in Delhi)... He cannot be a good prime minister,"
Kejriwal said.
Admitting that people had voted for Modi
nationally and for the AAP in Delhi, Kejriwal said: "He (Modi) should
run the country and let us run Delhi."
The AAP leader, who led his party to a sweeping win, accused Jung of behaving like a "polling agent" of the BJP.
"The lt. governor's house has become the second headquarters of the BJP... He is not acting as the lt governor of Delhi."
Jung
and Kejriwal's government have been locked in a bitter row over
administrative issues in the Delhi administration, with the lt.governor
asserting his authority in select areas.
The chief minister said Jung does not respond to telephone calls of Delhi Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia.
"Manish
calls him, many times, but his phone is never answered. If the watchman
of (BJP president) Amit Shah calls him, he will go crawling," the chief
minister said, using unusually strong words.
However, Kejriwal said his relations with Jung were cordial.
"When
we meet we hug each other. We have cordial relations with each other.
If he does something in our favour, he will be removed (as lt.governor).
What can he do?" he said.
Suggesting that he was a mass leader, Kejriwal said the BJP leadership must realize that he was not a Rahul Gandhi.
"Narendra
Modi ji must realise that I am not Rahul Gandhi," he said. Asked what
he meant by that, Kejriwal smiled and said after a pause: "The message I
wanted to convey has been conveyed."
Alleging Modi was after him
and didn't want him to succeed, he said the prime minister and the BJP
feared that AAP could replicate its Delhi success in other states too.
The chief minister also made light of reports that the central government could stop the salaries of Delhi government officials.
"Let
them do it if they can," he said, adding the AAP government was not
beholden to the central home ministry, to which the lt. governor
reports.