13. The Delhi government cannot
pass the Jan Lokpal Bill
in the assembly until the
Centre approves it.”
New Delhi, Nov 19: A day
after the Delhi cabinet okayed the anti-graft
Jan Lokpal Bill, the BJP on Friday questioned
the Arvind Kejriwal government’s move to table
the legislation in the assembly allegedly
without approval from the central government.
Bharatiya Janata Party’s
lawmaker Vijender Gupta, leader of the
opposition in the state assembly, met Lt.
Governor Najeeb Jung and told him that the
Arvind Kejriwal government would repeat its
action of February 2014 when it tried to
introduce the bill without taking the Centre’s
approval.
“The Delhi government
cannot pass the Jan Lokpal Bill in the assembly
until the Centre approves it. They (Delhi
government) have a hostile attitude towards the
Centre ever since they came to power and want
another confrontation,” Gupta said.
“Had they been serious
about the bill, they would have brought it much
earlier. Why pass it on the first day of the
winter session,” Gupta asked.
The AAP government is
likely to table the legislation in the assembly
next week. Earlier, the government maintained it
would consult the Centre before bringing the
bill in the house.
On the other hand, the Aam
Aadmi Party said the Delhi government move had
baffled the BJP.
“”Some political parties
in Delhi are now feeling threatened with the
passing of the Jan Lokpal bill in the cabinet.
Leaders of the BJP are especially feeling
uncomfortable and fear that their wrong deeds,
especially in institutions like the municipal
corporations of Delhi, will be exposed and a lot
of people will be behind bars,” AAP leader Dilip
Pandey said at a press conference here.
In February 2014, Arvind
Kejriwal resigned as Delhi chief minister as the
Congress and the BJP opposed the tabling of the
Jan Lokpal Bill, contending that the legislation
needed the Centre’s approval first.
The AAP again stormed to
power in February with the poll promise to bring
the bill, winning 67 of the 70 assembly seats.