Cash-for-query Row: Mahua Moitra to Appear Before Ethics Panel on November 2

GG News Bureau

New Delhi, 1st Nov. TMC MP Mahua Moitra will be appearing before the Lok Sabha Ethics Committee on November 2 to address the cash-for-query allegations against her. Ahead of her appearance, Moitra has shared a copy of the letter she wrote to the panel.

Moitra has been at the centre of a political controversy following allegations made by BJP MP Nishikant Dubey. Dubey claimed that Moitra accepted bribes from businessman Darshan Hiranandani in order to target the Adani Group. Moitra will now appear before the panel to address these allegations directly.

Sharing the letter dated October 31 on X, Moitra said, “Since Ethics Committee deemed it fit to release my summons to the media I think it is important I too release my letter to the Committee before my “hearing” tomorrow”.

In the letter, Moitra said she will appear before the panel on November 2 and will “demolish” the complaint of cash-for-query against her.

She stated in the letter that parliamentary committees lack criminal jurisdiction and emphasised the importance of involving law enforcement agencies in such cases.

Moitra also expressed her desire to cross-examine alleged “bribe-giver,” Hiranandani, who submitted an affidavit to the committee “without offering substantial evidence”.

The Lok Sabha MP also sought to cross-examine the complainant, Jai Anant Dehadral, who she claimed provided no documentary evidence to support the charges.

“In light of the seriousness of the allegations, it is imperative that the alleged ‘bribe-giver’ Darshan Hiranandani, who has given a ‘suo-moto’ affidavit to the Committee with scant details and no documentary evidence whatsoever, be called to depose before the Committee and provide the said evidence in the form of a documented itemised inventory with amounts, date etc,” she said.

“I wish to place on record that in keeping with the principles of natural justice I wish to exercise my right to cross-examine Hiranandani,” she said.

Moitra highlighted that an inquiry without allowing her the opportunity to cross-examine would be “incomplete and unfair”.

Highlighting the absence of a structured Code of Conduct for members, she emphasised the need for objectivity and fairness in addressing individual cases and avoiding political partisanship in the committee.

Moitra also raised concerns about what she claimed were “double standards” of the Ethics Committee in issuing a summons.

She said the panel has adopted a very different approach in the case of BJP MP Ramesh Bidhuri who has a “very serious complaint of hate speech” pending against him with the Privileges and Ethics branch.

Bidhuri was summoned on October 10 to provide oral evidence but he expressed his inability to depose as he was away campaigning in Rajasthan, she said.

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