Rajya Sabha wants Mayawati to withdraw resignation, deputy chairman Kurien says
The deputy speaker on Wednesday said the matter was simply a miscommunication as Mayawati had been given more than the usual three minutes allowed.
The Rajya Sabha wants Mayawati to withdraw her resignation, deputy chairman PJ Kurien said on Wednesday, a day after the BSP chief quit as a member of the House, saying she was not allowed to speak on the Dalit issue.
Kurien, with whom Mayawati had got angry when he asked her to conclude her speech after the prescribed three minutes, said the episode was a result of a “misunderstanding” and that he has “utmost respect” for the BSP leader.
“None of us are happy about her resigning. I have utmost respect for her. It was just a misunderstanding. We all have a lot of respect for her and regard her as a senior leader. The House will ask her to reconsider her decision,” Kurien said.
“... It is the decision of the House that she (Mayawati) should take back her resignation,” Kurien said.
He sought to set the record straight about yesterday’s developments, saying he had “nothing against anybody”.
The deputy chairman said there was no notice by Mayawati (about raising any issue).
He said when he came to the House, he had a list of 8-9 speakers under Rule 267 and Mayawati’s name was not there.
“...I want to set the record straight... When I came, I saw her standing and gave her three minutes (to speak)... I bypassed the Leader of Opposition and allowed her to speak,” he said.
Leader of Opposition Ghulam Nabi Azad joined Kurien and said, “We should request her to reconsider her resignation.”
Read | What BSP chief Mayawati’s threat to quit Rajya Sabha means | In 5 points
The deputy chairman then asked minister of state for parliamentary affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi about government’s view on this.
Naqvi indicated that the government had no objection if all the parties wanted so.
Mayawati stormed out of the House in anger on Tuesday when she was told to conclude her statements after three minutes of her speech on violence in Saharanpur in UP.
Mayawati, whose term in the Upper House was till April next year, had said that she would resign as there was no point to be a member when she was not allowed to speak.
Satish Chandra Misra of the BSP raised the matter on Wednesday, saying the entire treasury bench had been instructed to stand when Mayawati stood up to speak.
“They did not allow her to speak. She spoke for 2 minutes and nine seconds in breaks and would have even finished in 3 minutes,” Misra said.
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