Another senior Congress leader Kapil Sibal also hit out at the government over the Pulwama terror attack on Tuesday.
The
Congress on Tuesday attacked the government over the Pulwama terror
strike, alleging "huge security lapses", and asked Prime
Minister Narendra Modi to "walk the talk".
The Congress in the last few days had avoided directly attacking the government after Rahul Gandhi said on Saturday that his party isnot going to have any conversation over the next couple of days other than the fact that "our most beloved people have been killed, their families need us, and we are going to stand with them".
The Congress in the last few days had avoided directly attacking the government after Rahul Gandhi said on Saturday that his party isnot going to have any conversation over the next couple of days other than the fact that "our most beloved people have been killed, their families need us, and we are going to stand with them".
However,
signalling a shift in stance on Tuesday, Congress spokesperson
Abhishek Manu Singhvi tweeted: "Congress highly responsible and
very restrained post Pulwama. Modi pre-2014 made highly provocative
statements including resignation calls for then PM (Manmohan Singh)
at smallest incident."
"We
do not do so post Uri, post Parliament attack, post Pulwama. But huge
security lapses have to to be plugged for no recurrence," he
said.
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Such
"huge security lapses" including the "ridiculous idea"
of moving 2,500 jawans in 78 vehicles at one go, allowing any
civilian vehicle on road simultaneously, ignoring direct written
intelligence reports on Jaish suicide attack since December 2018,"
he tweeted.
Is
this attention to detail by "56 chest"?, he said.
At
a press conference on Monday, Singhvi, when askedwhy the Congress was
silent on the alleged "failures" of the government leading
to the Pulwama attack, had said he as well as many other Congressmen
and non-Congressmen had tweeted their concerns in the first few hours
after the attack.
Another
senior Congress leader Kapil Sibal also hit out at the government
over the Pulwama
terror attack on Tuesday.
"Modi
ji you say: It's over, the time to talk. You maybe right, but: It's
time to walk the talk," he said in a tweet.
"Promise
us: No more 'japphis'. No more birthday bashes," he said in an
apparent reference to Prime Minister Modi's surprise visitto Pakistan
in December 2015, coinciding with Pakistan's then Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif's birthday.
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