Congress is enraging over the recent announcement by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to meditate at Rock Memorial in Kanyakumari. The grand previous get together’s Tamil Nadu unit chief, Okay Selvaperunthagai, mentioned that the Election Commission mustn’t give permission for such an ‘indirect campaigning’.
Selvaperunthagai argued that the Election Commission ought to deny permission for the Prime Minister’s programme, as it might violate the mannequin code of conduct. He claimed that this was an try at implied campaigning after the official canvassing interval had ended.
The TNCC chief took to social media platform ‘X’ to precise his issues; he wrote in Tamil, “We would like to point out here that Prime Minister Modi has no legal right to sit and meditate in the Vivekananda Memorial Hall. As the seventh phase of the final election campaign ends on the evening of May 30, sitting in Vivekananda Hall and meditating in silence should be considered as campaigning to vote in favour of the BJP, directly or indirectly, through television media.”
அறிக்கை
2024 மக்களவைத் தேர்தல் இறுதி பரப்புரை முடிந்து, மே 30ஆம் தேதி கன்னியாகுமரிக்கு வருகை புரிந்து, அங்குள்ள விவேகானந்தர் மண்டபத்தில் மூன்று நாட்கள் தியானம் செய்வதென நரேந்திர மோடி திட்டமிட்டிருக்கிறார். இறுதிகட்ட தேர்தல் நடைபெற இருக்கிற 57 மக்களவைத் தொகுதிகளில் அரசியல் ஆதாயம்… pic.twitter.com/LGCrgYBcJc
— Selvaperunthagai Okay (@SPK_TNCC) May 29, 2024
The BJP leaders said that the PM is scheduled to meditate for 48 hours from the night of May 30 to June 1 at Dhyan Mandapam, a web site believed to be related to Swami Vivekananda’s religious awakening. They added that Vivekananda arrived at this location after travelling throughout the nation, meditating for 3 days, and imagining a developed India.
“Meditating at the same place shows Prime Minister Modi’s commitment to bringing Swami ji’s vision of a Viksit Bharat to life,” reported PTI, quoting a BJP chief.
Modi had opted for the same meditation train in Kedarnath Cave after the 2019 ballot marketing campaign.
The final section of polling is slated for June 1, whereas campaigning ends two days earlier than the elections.