Pallava Bagla/Corbis News/Getty Images
Indian Parliament building on May 27, 2023.
New Delhi
CNN
—
He accuses opposition representatives India India’s government launched an assault on democracy after suspending dozens of them from Parliament this week, the latest development in a historic dispute between the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party and a newly formed coalition that seeks to oust them next year.
House leaders suspended a total of 141 opposition lawmakers — 95 from the House and 46 from the Senate — according to a tally by CNN affiliate CNN News18, which one rights group said was a record number.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party has a majority in both chambers and is now expected to pass legislation almost unopposed during the remainder of the session that ends on Friday.
The suspensions come as Parliament prepares to debate a controversial criminal reform bill, which Mallikarjun Kharge, head of the main opposition Congress party, said could “unleash draconian powers and hamper citizens’ rights.”
He added that the Modi government “does not want the people of India to listen to the opposition while these bills are being discussed and deliberated over.” books On X, formerly Twitter.
The suspension decision came after a major security breach occurred in Parliament last week when two men stormed the hall, chanted slogans and fired colored gas. Opposition lawmakers demanded a parliamentary debate on the violation, but it was suspended by House leaders for causing chaos.
“For the first time in my parliamentary career in nearly 15 years, I too entered the House carrying a banner calling for discussion on the recent security breach,” Shashi Tharoor, a suspended Congress member, wrote on X. “I did this in solidarity with my colleagues (in Congress) who were unjustly suspended for demanding that the government be held accountable.”
Jairam Ramesh, another suspended Congress lawmaker, described the suspensions as a “complete purge”. The dismissal of opposition lawmakers occurred “so that draconian bills are passed without meaningful debate,” he claimed on Channel X.
The New York-based Human Rights Foundation called the suspensions a “record number” and said it “strongly condemns India’s ongoing crackdown on dissent and critics,” in a statement posted on X on Tuesday.
Most of the suspended MPs belong to an alliance known as India, a coalition of opposition parties looking to defeat Modi and the Bharatiya Janata Party in next year’s general elections expected in May.
Critics have repeatedly accused the BJP of stifling dissent and undermining democracy in Parliament. She has repeatedly denied these accusations.
CNN has reached out to the BJP for comment. On X, the party He said Lawmakers have been suspended for their behavior in Parliament.
In an interview with a Hindi-language newspaper on Sunday, Modi said the security breach was a serious matter that should be investigated, but did not require parliamentary debate.