New Delhi: As soon as the first session of the 18th Lok Sabha began in Parliament on Monday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi fiercely targeted the Congress and called this crisis a black spot on India's democracy. Before the completion of 50 years of Emergency, the Prime Minister cornered the Congress. Addressing the media before the session began, Modi said that 25 June will mark 50 years of Emergency, this day is considered a black spot on democracy. However, Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge also gave a sharp reply to Modi.
Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge, who was protesting in Parliament with opposition leaders, attacked Narendra Modi. He said that Modi forgot that for the last ten years, there was an undeclared emergency in the country, which was ended by the public. Kharge posted on Twitter that Modi is reminding Congress of 50 years of imposition of emergency. But he forgets that during the last 10 years of his tenure, there was an undeclared emergency in the country. The Lok Sabha elections have received an anti-Modi referendum. If he has become the Prime Minister, then he should focus on work.
Meanwhile, on the first day of the first session in Parliament, all the MPs including Prime Minister Modi took oath as members of the 18th Lok Sabha. When Modi was taking oath, Congress MP Rahul Gandhi showed the Constitution in his hand to Modi. The video of which went viral on social media. During this, the opposition leaders raised slogans of Constitution Zindabad, Hum Samvidhan Bachayenge and Apna Loktantra Bachayenge, holding the Constitution in their hands. Talking to the media about this, Rahul said that we will not allow any kind of attack on the Constitution. Let us not make the kind of attack that Modi and Amit Shah are making on the Constitution.
On 25 June 1975, the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi imposed emergency in the country. Keeping this in mind, various programs will be organized by BJP across the country on 25 June and this day will be celebrated as a black day. BJP spokesperson Anil Baluni said that by organizing a nationwide program on the 25th, the dictatorship of Congress during the crisis will be exposed. BJP President J.P. Nadda will address the program. BJP has named it the black day of democracy. The BJP leader said that by imposing emergency, Congress had held the country's democracy and constitution hostage for 21 months. Due to which this day will be celebrated as a black day.
By-elections will be held on 13 assembly seats on July 10
After the Lok Sabha elections, by-elections are to be held on 13 assembly seats in the country. There will be a contest between the ruling NDA and the opposition Bharat Gathbandhan on these seats. By-elections will be held on 13 assembly seats in seven states. These seats are vacant due to resignation or death of the current MLAs. These include Rupauli in Bihar, Raiganj Ranaghat South Bagda and Maniktala in Bengal, Vikravandi in Tamil Nadu, Amarwada in Madhya Pradesh, Badrinath and Mangalore in Uttarakhand, Jalandhar West in Punjab and Dehra, Hamirpur and Nalagarh seats in Himachal Pradesh. By-elections will be held on all these seats on July 10, so the regional leaders of both the parties have become active.
MPs took oath in Sanskrit, Hindi, English, Gujarati and other languages
MPs in Lok Sabha took oath in different languages. These include English, Hindi, Gujarati, Assamese, Oriya, Bengali etc. When Modi took oath in Hindi, BJP MPs raised slogans of Jai Shri Ram. Apart from Modi, Amit Shah, Gadkari, Rajnath Singh also took oath in Hindi. Amid the paper leak controversy, Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan took oath in Oriya, on which the opposition raised slogans of Nit-Nit. MPs from Gujarat took oath in Gujarati. MPs can take oath in English or 22 other languages.