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Corruption row as Indian govt faces confidence vote

July 17, 2008 00:00:00


NEW DELHI, July 16 (AFP): India's embattled coalition government has been hit by allegations it is offering bribes and lucrative jobs as it tries to muster the support needed to survive a parliamentary confidence vote next week.

If the government loses, the world's largest democracy will go into early elections, and opposition parties-especially the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) -- will be given a big political boost.

With the stakes so high, opponents of the dominant Congress party have alleged big money backhanders are on offer to fence-sitting MPs who could tip next Tuesday's vote either way.

The leader of the Communist Party of India, A.B. Bardhan, publicly accused the government of putting together a war chest containing millions of dollars of bribe money.

"No one has principles any more," Bardhan fumed in a public meeting on Monday. "It's not a question of a few million, but 250 million rupees (5.8 million dollars) for horsetrading."

The confidence vote was triggered by the withdrawal of support from a bloc of communist and left-wing parties opposed to a civilian nuclear deal that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh struck with the United States in 2005.

The government says the deal would help meet India's exploding energy demands.

The left and the BJP say the deal would tie India too close to Washington, and they are also railing over high inflation, notably food and fuel prices.

A rebel MP from the Samajwadi Party-which has promised to vote with the coalition-claimed he has also been offered a financial windfall or a top job should he tow the party line and help keep the government in office.

"I had expressed my objection to supporting the government," Munawar Hasan told AFP by telephone from his parliamentary constituency in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

"Very soon after that, I received a call on behalf of parties in New Delhi telling me that I could get a cabinet post or money -- 200 million or 250 million rupees-if I voted for the government," Hasan alleged.

The government has angrily denied "either directly or indirectly" approaching Hasan, or any other MP.

"We are seeking support of MPs no doubt, but there are no offers of money or ministerships," a Congress spokesman said.

Party leader Sonia Gandhi has predicted the government will sail through the test-but the numbers suggest there could be plenty of nail-biting next week.

At present, the government has 225 assured seats plus 39 Samajwadi Party MPs it can count on in India's 545-member Lok Sabha, or lower house-leaving it still slightly short of the 272 votes it needs to win.


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