Union minister Ananta Kumar Hegde wonders whether secularists know their parentage, Hansraj Ahir says doctors who join naxals will be pumped with bullets
At a time when the country is live with jubilation of the festive season and plans of ushering in the New Year, two of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ministers are busy spewing venom and vitriol.
Union minister for Skill Development Anant Kumar Hegde, who is known for being a Hindutva hardliner and for his hate speeches against people from the minority community, has once again kicked up a row – this time for his remarks against individuals who take pride in being secular.
Addressing a function in Kukanur town of Karnataka’s Koppal district on Sunday, Hegde said that his party, the BJP, will “soon change the Constitution”, hinting that the saffron party wanted to delete the word ‘secular’ from the Preamble.
Asserting that there was now a “new fad where people project themselves as secular”, the Uttara Kannada MP urged people to “claim with pride that they are Muslim, Christian, Lingayat, Brahmin, or a Hindu,” and said: “Those who, without knowing about their parental blood, call themselves secular, they don’t have their own identity… They don’t know about their parentage, but they are intellectuals.”
Hegde, who was recently in the news for terming 18th Century Mysore ruler and Indian freedom fighter Tipu Sultan as a “wretched fanatic and mass rapist” said: “Some people say the Constitution says secular and you must accept it. We will respect the Constitution, but the Constitution has changed several times and it will change in the future too. We are here to change the Constitution and we’ll change it.”
Hegde’s comments, seen as his bid to communalise and polarise the electorate of Karanataka which goes to polls early next year, were immediately condemned by chief minister Siddaramaiah who said Hegde has “clearly not studied the Constitution, does not know parliamentary or political language,” and must know that “each and every individual in this country is an Indian, and every religion has equal right and opportunity.”
While Hegde kicked up a storm by his comments against the Constitution and secular individuals, his colleague in the Union council of ministers, Hansraj Ahir too triggered a row by almost warning government doctors who had skipped an event in which he was the chief guest with state-sponsored violence.
Ahir, the Union minister of state for home affairs, was in his parliamentary constituency of Chandrapur in Maharashtra on Monday to launch a 24X7 store for medicines at a government-run hospital. The Union minister was irked by the absence of senior doctors at the function and remarked: “If these people don’t believe in democracy, they should join Maoists and we will shoot them.”
“The mayor came, the deputy mayor came but what stopped the doctors from coming for the event… What do the Naxals want? They don’t want democracy… So these people (the absent doctors) don’t want democracy, then they should join the Naxals. Then (once you join the Naxals) we will pump golis (bullets) into you, why you are giving goli (medicines) here?” Ahir added.