How Strong Is Your Law? Kumari Selja's Sharp Retort to Amit Shah

Congress MP Kumari Selja has sharply questioned the government's legal preparedness regarding infiltrators. Her comments come after Home Minister Amit Shah accused the Opposition of protecting illegal immigrants. Shah reiterated the government's policy to detect, delete, and deport all infiltrators during a heated Lok Sabha debate. The session was marked by frequent interruptions and eventually led to an Opposition walkout.

Key Points: Kumari Selja Questions Amit Shah on Infiltrators and Law Strength

  • Congress MP Kumari Selja questions the legal system's ability to identify and handle infiltrators
  • Home Minister Amit Shah vows to detect, delete, and deport all illegal immigrants
  • Shah accuses Opposition of protecting infiltrators to win elections through corrupt practices
  • Lok Sabha debate sees heated exchanges, with Rahul Gandhi challenging Shah to a public debate
3 min read

How strong is your law: Kumari Selja after HM Shah accuses Opposition of protecting infiltrators

Congress MP Kumari Selja challenges Home Minister Amit Shah's claims on infiltrators, asking how they exist if government laws are truly strong and effective.

"So how can there be infiltrators in this country? How strong is your law? - Kumari Selja"

New Delhi, Dec 11

As Union Home Minister Amit Shah once again accused the Opposition of protecting infiltrators and vowed to "detect, delete, and deport" them, Congress MP Kumari Selja on Thursday hit back, questioning the government’s capability and legal preparedness and asking how infiltrators could exist in India if the government’s laws were truly strong and effective.

Speaking to IANS outside Parliament, Kumari Selja said: "So how can there be infiltrators in this country? How strong is your law? What is the state of your legal system? Will it only be revealed through SIR? In any case, you do not have any law to even identify who the infiltrators are. What is the government doing about it?"

She added that such matters should be clear through regular legal procedures. "From the common law, we should know who came from outside and who are Indians. The government should know this already."

On Wednesday, Amit Shah asserted that the Narendra Modi government’s policy is clear: all illegal immigrants must be detected, their names deleted from electoral rolls, and they must be deported from the country. He argued that the Opposition had raised the issue only because it could no longer win elections through “corrupt practices,” claiming that the Congress’s repeated poll defeats were due to its leadership and not because of EVMs or “vote chori” (vote theft).

Intervening in the debate on electoral reforms in the Lok Sabha, Amit Shah rebutted the Opposition’s charges at length. His 90-minute speech saw frequent interruptions from Leader of the Opposition Rahul Gandhi, who challenged him to a debate on the allegations he had made in three separate press conferences, accusing the BJP of “vote chori.” The exchanges intensified, eventually prompting an Opposition walkout.

Seeking to target the Congress, Amit Shah cited three instances of what he called historical “vote chori” involving party icons Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi, and Sonia Gandhi. He claimed that Nehru became Prime Minister in 1947 despite receiving fewer internal votes than Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel; that Indira Gandhi granted herself immunity after her election was set aside by a court; and that the third case, concerning how Sonia Gandhi “became a voter before becoming a citizen of India,” had just reached the civil courts — a remark that triggered strong protests from the Congress benches.

Amit Shah also accused the Opposition of trying to “normalise and formalise” illegal immigrants by resisting SIR in states like West Bengal and Tamil Nadu. He warned Trinamool Congress and DMK members that such resistance would cost them heavily in the upcoming assembly elections. The NDA, he maintained, would continue its policy of "detect, delete, and deport" regardless of Opposition walkouts.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As an observer, the debate seems to have completely shifted from policy to personal attacks and historical blame games. How does arguing about Nehru or Indira Gandhi help solve the current issue of illegal immigration? Both sides need to get back to the actual problem.
R
Rohit P
Amit Shah is right. We need a firm policy. "Detect, delete, deport" is the only way. The opposition is just playing vote bank politics by opposing NRC in Bengal and Tamil Nadu. National security should come first! 🇮🇳
P
Priya S
The walkout says it all. When you can't answer tough questions, you run away. The government keeps talking about strong laws but on the ground, the system is so slow and confused. Common citizens suffer due to this political drama.
A
Aman W
Why is everything about elections? From both sides! Can't our leaders have a serious discussion on creating a fair, humane, and efficient system to handle migration? This constant blame game helps no one. We need solutions, not slogans.
K
Kavya N
The legal point is crucial. If there's no clear law to identify an infiltrator, how will you detect or deport? The government must first pass a watertight law in Parliament with consensus. All this talk without a proper legal framework is just politics.

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