Calling Punjab minister Navjot Singh Sidhu a 'Pakistan agent', Union Minister Harsimrat Kaur Badal on Wednesday hit out at the Congress leader for questioning the outcome of air strike conducted by the Indian Air Force (IAF) in Pakistan.
Speaking to ANI, Badal slammed Sidhu for taking credit for the construction of Kartarpur corridor and said, "Sidhu was a state guest from Pakistan side (during foundation stone laying) where Pakistan Prime minister invited him to fight elections from his country. It is very clear that what kind of compromises took place between them that today even after the attack on our Jawans, Sidhu is still speaking Pakistan's language and asking his own armed forces of proof, same as the neighbouring country."
"How in (hand-in-glove) he is with Pakistan general and Pakistan Prime Minister, the world knows. If he got it done from there but who got it done from our government, who passed it in the cabinet? The corridor wouldn't have been possible without Modi government taking prompt decisions. Sidhu can say what he wants, he is a Pak agent, and he obviously has to speak about Pakistan," she added.
Badal also lambasted former Prime Ministers of Congress and blamed them of working against the causes of Sikhs.
"If Punjab was divided it was Jawaharlal Nehru's decisions. The Gurudwara which is three kilometres away, it could have been in India. After Nehru broke Punjab, Indira Gandhi came and attacked the Golden temple. Rajiv Gandhi for his political reasons massacred millions of Sikhs all over. Now Rahul Gandhi speaks the language of Pakistan," she said.
"Congress party has always been anti-Sikh and Anti-Pakistan. Congress and Gandhi family has always gone against us. God forbid if some other government comes all Sikhs who vote for Congress will be responsible that this corridor doesn't become reality. They are doing everything to derail it," alleged Badal.
Alleging further that since the 'Congress partitioned India, it was the people of Punjab that bore the maximum brunt of the state being divided', she added, "The maximum amount of blood was also shed at our borders. But the Congress people not even take care where the Sikh religion starts from. They were just a few kilometres across the borders, to make the borders of the country such that we have access to at least our own shrine."
She also credited Prime Minister Modi led Central government for fulfilling the long-standing demand of Sikh community by paving way for Kartarpur corridor and said, "From 2014 Shiromani Akali Dal has been saying that this is 550 years of Guru Nanak Dev Ji, we must have a corridor. I am grateful to Prime Minister Modi who took such a historic and decisive step. Congress even made Sikh Prime minister but he could begin a single step. Our government not only started it but within one month allotted the work and now land acquisition is going on and despite all this tension the talks are going on."
The Union Minister also said that Kartarpur is a corridor of peace and is going to harbour good time in future and improve relation.
She also said that Pakistan's propaganda is not going to work as people of Punjab can look-through it.
"I am not apprehensive, I have full confidence in the people of our state who have gone through dark days of terrorism, no matter what Pakistan wants to spread, and our people are not willing to touch them. I have full faith and confidence in our armed forces will be able to handle this," said Badal.
On demand of visa-free and passport-free access in the corridor, she cited the concerns of government and said, "All these discussions will take place. Everyone wants it must be full proof and secure. For the Sikh community, the prime importance is that we will finally have access to the Gurudwara to bow our head. Tensions and borders will not come in way to our faith."
On March 8, Congress leader Navjot Singh Sidhu had hit out at the Centre over the air strikes carried out recently and said the government is "not able to discern between trees and structures," despite there being 48 satellites.
Sidhu's remark comes as images have surfaced of the area the IAF struck on February 26, targetting terror launch pads in the region.
ANI