Khattar’s beef remark: BJP says ‘will advise him, it’s wrong to say like that’

Haryana CM has said that Muslims will have to quit eating beef

Update: 2015-10-16 16:07 GMT
Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar (Photo: PTI )

New Delhi: BJP on Friday dissociated itself from the views of Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar that Muslims will have to quit eating beef and said this was not the party's stand.

"The views expressed by Khattar are not that of the party. I will talk to him and will advise him. It is wrong to say like that," Parliamentary Affairs Minister M Venkaiah Naidu said, adding that it is not correct to link anyone's eating habits to religion.

"This is not the BJP's position.... It is not correct to link eating habits to religion. People have to keep in mind the sentiments of others and eating is a personal choice of people," he said.

Naidu said no civilized person will support the killing of anyone for his eating habits and termed the Dadri incident as "highly condemnable". The Prime Minister and BJP chief Amit Shah have also expressed their disapproval of the incident. 

He, however, said the Dadri incident was a law and order issue concerning Uttar Pradesh and its chief minister Akhilesh Yadav and the Samajwadi Party government should be questioned on it, instead of putting the blame on the BJP-led central government.

Also read:

Muslims can stay in India, but have to give up eating beef, says Haryana CM Manohar Lal Khattar

'Didn't say Muslims must give up beef,' Haryana CM Khattar clarifies

Khattar's beef remark: Congress says 'sad day' for India's democracy

The Parliamentary Affairs Minister also denied that intolerance was increasing in the country and said that such incidents have been taking place in the past too. He alleged that there was a "systematic and malicious campaign" to derail government's and Prime Minister's focus on development and growth of the country. 

"There is a systematic and malicious campaign against the BJP-led government to divert its focus from development and to derail Prime Minister Narendra Modi's efforts of making India develop and progress further," he said.

Naidu also termed the protest by writers who returned their awards as "selective" and questioned how many of them had resigned when Emergency was imposed in the country or when the 1984 anti-Sikh riots took place in the aftermath of the assassination of the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and Sikhs were massacred in Delhi. 

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