Headlines
Lalit Modi's salvoes aim to singe Congress
New Delhi, June 26
The Lalit Modi controversy
on Friday appeared to taint the Congress, with the former IPL chief
claiming that he had "bumped" into party president Sonia Gandhi's
daughter Priyanka and her husband Robert Vadra in a London restaurant
last year, a charge denied by Priyanka Vandra's office.
Modi did
not imply any wrongdoing on their part, but the Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP), smarting from several damaging revelations by the former IPL
chief, immediately sprang into an attacking mode.
"The Congress must explain. Why is Mrs Gandhi silent," asked BJP spokesperson Sambit Patra.
Priyanka Gandhi's office said "there was no meeting".
Party
spokesperson Randeep Singh Surjewala said Priyanka Gandhi and Vadra had
"committed no crime". There was no "social interaction" of any nature
between them. "Looking at each other in a restaurant is neither a crime
nor morally improper."
The BJP has been facing fire over
Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje's reported connections with
Lalit Modi. She is alleged to have signed documents supporting Lalit
Modi's application for residency in Britain even though he was said to
be a fugitive from India.
Lalit Modi tweeted earlier in the day:
"Happy to meet the Gandhi family in London. I had run into Robert and
Priyanka separately in a restaurant."
"If I remember correctly,
it was last year and the year before. Doubt whether reported it to
anyone. They were in power then," he said.
Modi is embroiled in a
row over alleged financial irregularities when he was the IPL chief.
The Enforcement Directorate has built up a case against him. The
government had also cancelled his passport.
Modi also tweeted
that the Gandhi couple was with Timmy Sarna who is with DLF Brands Ltd.
"They can call me. Will tell them what I feel about them exactly," he
said in the tweet.
The BJP asked Sonia Gandhi to explain why
Priyanka and Vadra met Modi, as claimed by him, since her Congress party
was demanding the resignation of Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara
Raje over her help to Modi.
Surjewala, though, said that Lalit Modi was trying to come to BJP's rescue by creating "red herrings and diversionary tactics".
He
asked the government to release records of discussions the former
finance minister P. Chidambaram had with the British government
demanding that Lalit Modi be handed over to India.