Kejriwal's apology will not bring back my son: Gajendra Singh's father
New Delhi, April 24: The family of Gajendra Singh, the Rajasthan farmer who hanged himself from a tree in full public gaze at an AAP rally in Delhi, on Thursday rejected Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal's apology.
Speaking to media, Singh's father Banne Singh said that his apology is too little and too late and that it won't bring back his son.
"If something happens to his son, I will also go and apologize. Will apology bring back my son? All this is a sham. Such a big incident took place and he is apologizing, Singh's father told ANI.
[I continued my speech, that was my error: Arvind Kejriwal on farmer suicide]
Earlier on Friday, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal apologised for not calling off the event and admitted that his making a speech was a "mistake".
Under fire over his handling of the issue that has snowballed into a major controversy, the AAP supremo also slammed the media and the opposition parties, saying that the debate had veered away from the "real issue" of the farmers' plight.
"I was to deliver an hour long speech but I wrapped it up in 10-15 mins. I think that was my mistake. Probably I should not have spoken. If that has hurt anynone's sentiments I would like to apologise."
Also
read:
Political
slugfest
over
farmer's
suicide
escalates
"I
am
guilty.
Blame
me.
I
feel
the
rally
should
have
been
called
off.
But
please
focus
on
the
real
issue
of
the
farmers
and
desist
from
politicking.
Whoever
is
guilty
hang
him
but
the
focus
of
the
debate
should
be
on
why
the
farmers
are
committing
suicide,"
Kejriwal
told
a
news
channel.
Seeking to play down his government's face-off with the Delhi Police over the probe of the incident, Kejriwal said he was even ready to file his statement to the police if needed.
"District Magistrate has the jurisdiction to investigate under the CrPC and the police does criminal investigation based on FIR...if police calls me I will go to file my statement," he said.
On Friday, opposition members created ruckus in the Lok Sabha over the incident, leading to adjournment of proceedings even as the Centre said it was ready to discuss the matter.
Making his point against AAP, Home Minister Rajnath Singh had said the crowd gathered for the rally "clapped" and "raised slogans" as the farmer Gajendra Singh climbed up the tree and ended his life, prompting the party to accuse Singh of "lying".
Many, including Congress leader Mallikarjun Kharge, sought a judicial probe to fix accountability, saying police are in a dock over the matter and they cannot probe themselves.
A judicial probe, Kharge said, was necessary as Kejriwal and the Delhi police, which reports to the MHA, had offered conflicting versions of the event.
OneIndia
News
(With
agency
inputs)
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