...
...
...
Next Story

Sharad Pawar reacts to ‘no Dharna in Parliament House’ notice

By | Edited by , New Delhi
Updated on: Jul 15, 2022 03:40 PM IST

“We have received a statement from the Parliament Speaker that there is no such restriction (protests not allowed on Parliament premises). Leaders of all political parties will sit together tomorrow (Saturday) in Delhi and discuss,” Pawar said.

Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) chief Sharad Pawar on Friday reacted to a notice issued by Rajya Sabha secretariat that states that demonstrations, dharnas, fast or religious ceremonies can no longer be held in the precincts of Parliament House.

Sharad Pawar said he received a statement from the "Parliament Speaker" that there is no such restriction.(ANI file photo)

Speaking to reporters in Nagpur, the NCP Rajya Sabha MP said he received a statement from the "Parliament Speaker" that there is no such restriction, news agency ANI reported.

Also Read| After list of unparliamentary words, a fresh notice to MPs irks Opposition

“We have received a statement from the Parliament Speaker that there is no such restriction (protests not allowed on Parliament premises). Leaders of all political parties will sit together tomorrow (Saturday) in Delhi and discuss,” Pawar said.

The new bulletin, which has been issued by Rajya Sabha secretary general PC Mody ahead of the Monsoon session of Parliament beginning July 18, said the kind cooperation of members is solicited.

"Members cannot use the precincts of the Parliament House for any demonstration, dharna, strike, fast, or for the purpose of performing any religious ceremony," the bulletin said.

At least 40 such unparliamentary words and terms were listed in the booklet.

Several opposition leaders strongly criticised the list and alleged that it only contained words that opponents used to describe the Centre.

Amid the mounting anger, Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla said on Thursday that no word was banned from use in Parliament but only expunged based on context and all Members were free to express their views.

“No word or phrase has been banned in Parliament. Members of Parliament have full freedom to express themselves on the floor of the House. The process of identifying unparliamentary words, based on words expunged in Parliament or assemblies, had started since 1954,” Birla said.

 
Get Latest real-time updates on India News, Weather Today, Latest News with including Bihar Chunav and Chandra Grahan 2025 Live on Hindustan Times.
Get Latest real-time updates on India News, Weather Today, Latest News with including Bihar Chunav and Chandra Grahan 2025 Live on Hindustan Times.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Subscribe Now