This Article is From May 12, 2014

'Should Hands be Cut Off?' BJP's Murli Manohar Joshi Defends Congress' Ajay Rai

Congress' Varanasi candidate Ajay Rai has been issued notice for wearing his party symbol while voting

Varanasi: Senior BJP leader Murli Manohar Joshi raised eyebrows today as he appeared to defend Narendra Modi's Congress rival in Varanasi, Ajay Rai, against whom an FIR or First Information Report has been filed for poll violation.

Mr Rai was seen wearing his party's symbol, the hand, while standing in the voting queue.

Though the BJP demanded strict action against the Congress candidate, Mr Joshi described it as a minor issue. "It is not a big deal. Everyone takes their hand into the poll booth, should they cut it off?" questioned the BJP veteran, who contested from Kanpur after making way for Mr Modi in Varanasi, which he had won in 2009.

Mr Rai is the third prominent candidate in Varanasi, where the main contest is seen to be between Mr Modi, the BJP's prime ministerial candidate, and Arvind Kejriwal, the chief of the Aam Aadmi Party. (also read: Kejriwal Says his Fight is With Modi, Incorrect Says Ajay Rai)

On April 30, the Commission had ordered an FIR or First Information Report against Mr Modi for flashing his party's symbol, the lotus, and making a speech near the booth in Gandhinagar where he voted.

The BJP, in the middle of a bitter confrontation with the Election Commission over the refusal of permission for Mr Modi's rally in Varanasi last week, used the Ajay Rai controversy to deliver a caustic message.

"We would like the Election Commission to ensure that when there is a violation of Model Code of Conduct, it must be properly take into the logical conclusion. So that there is no impression that different parties are being treated differently, that is our great agony," said senior BJP leader Ravi Shankar Prasad. (Also read: 'Security curbs only for Modi, not for Rahul?' Jaitley asks EC)

Mr Rai was defensive. "I didn't flash it like others did," he said, not naming Mr Modi, "the symbol was pinned to the kurta I wore yesterday and it stayed on. I wore it very normally."
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