Key Points

The Rajasthan Assembly witnessed major chaos as Congress MLAs protested against new CCTV cameras. Opposition leader Tika Ram Jully accused the government of spying through the additional cameras. Speaker Vasudev Devnani clarified the cameras were technical upgrades without audio recording capabilities. The protests led to adjournment of proceedings and overshadowed other important assembly business.

Key Points: Rajasthan Assembly Ruckus Over Congress Spying Claims on CCTV Cameras

  • Congress MLAs accused government of spying through two extra cameras in assembly
  • Speaker clarified cameras don't record audio and are technical upgrades
  • Proceedings adjourned till 2 pm due to ruckus from both sides
  • Issue overshadowed tributes to Jhalawar school accident victims
2 min read

Extra eyes: Ruckus in Rajasthan Assembly over CCTVs; Congress claims 'spying'

Congress MLAs storm Well of Rajasthan Assembly alleging government spying through new CCTV cameras. Speaker denies audio recording, calls it technical upgrade amid chaos.

"Earlier you said cameras were upgraded, now you admit new cameras were installed. Why do these cameras remain on even after adjournment? - Tika Ram Jully"

Jaipur, Sep 10

The Rajasthan Assembly once again witnessed chaos on Wednesday as the controversy over the installation of additional cameras by Opposition Congress escalated.

Despite Assembly Speaker Vasudev Devnani's clarification that the cameras neither record audio nor violate privacy, Congress MLAs remained unconvinced, stormed into the Well of the House, and raised slogans.

Leader of Opposition (LoP) Tika Ram Jully accused the state government of "spying" through two extra cameras and questioned why he had no access to the official YouTube feed.

"Earlier you said cameras were upgraded, now you admit new cameras were installed. Why do these cameras remain on even after adjournment? Who controls them, and do they have YouTube access?" LoP Jully asked.

The uproar began soon after the Question Hour.

State Parliamentary Affairs Minister Jogaram Patel, taunting Congress MLAs for boycotting earlier sessions, listed reasons for their protests.

His remarks further inflamed tensions, leading to heated exchanges between the Treasury and Opposition benches.

With both the Treasury and Opposition benches creating ruckus, Speaker Devnani adjourned proceedings till 2 p.m. on Wednesday.

Responding to the allegations levelled by Congress MLAs, Speaker Devnani said that cameras have been part of the Assembly since its establishment.

Under the 'One Nation, One Application' project, technical upgrades were made for live broadcasts on YouTube and for international programmes such as the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association sessions.

Cameras were also placed in the officers' gallery following demands from MLAs to track attendance.

"None of the cameras record audio. This is a normal technical upgrade. Allegations of spying are baseless. Cameras exist in the Parliament too. Privacy has not been violated, nor will it be," the Speaker said, urging cooperation to run the House smoothly.

Congress MLAs boycotted the Question Hour earlier on Wednesday, waved posters, and marched from the MLA quarters to the Assembly premises.

They said that the new cameras were deliberately targeted at the Opposition benches to monitor private discussions.

The issue overshadowed other business, including tributes to children killed in the Jhalawar school accident and two bills scheduled for passage on the last day of the Monsoon session.

For the past two days, the Zero Hour has been completely washed out due to Congress protests.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Actually, the Speaker has a point. Cameras are standard in parliamentary systems worldwide. The Congress is making an issue out of nothing. They should focus on real problems facing Rajasthan.
Sarah B
As someone who follows Indian politics, I find it concerning that cameras remain on after adjournment. The Opposition has legitimate questions about access and control. Transparency is needed, not just assurances.
A
Aditya G
Both sides are playing politics. BJP should have consulted opposition before installing new cameras. Congress shouldn't have disrupted proceedings. Important bills are getting delayed because of this tamasha.
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Nisha Z
If cameras don't record audio and are only for live broadcast, what's the problem? Our assemblies need modernization. Congress is just looking for excuses to create disturbance. 🙄
M
Michael C
Interesting to see how similar political tactics are across democracies. The opposition's job is to question, but they should also ensure governance isn't completely halted. Balance is key.

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