Modi Govt stand on Ayodhya will reflect need, legal propriety: Jaitley

Arun Jaitley file Aayush Goel (File) Finance Minister Arun Jaitley | Aayush Goel

The Narendra Modi government will consider both 'need' as well as constitutionality while taking a call on what stance it takes on the Ayodhya issue, Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said on Tuesday.

The senior BJP leader dubbed the Congress's arguments on the Rafale issue as one reduced to being contested on a "dictational ambiguity" in the Supreme Court judgement.

"What steps the government should take in the matter [Ayodhya temple issue] are steps the government will consider and reflect on. It [Modi government] will reflect on the need, it will reflect on the legal propriety, it will reflect on constitutionality before it takes a conclusion," Jaitley said while speaking at an event organised by Republic TV.

Jaitley said he would have wanted an early resolution to the Ayodhya temple issue, considering the anxiety and tensions that it causes but also understands the Supreme Court's difficulties.

Jaitley said the resilience that rests within India, beyond the voices on the extreme sides, will ensure that a solution is found to the issue.

“One need not be extraordinarily worried over how the solution is found—whether through the judicial process or through the political process,” Jaitley said.

In a different context, Jaitley said he was concerned about the quality of public discourse in the country and pitched for a shift to rationality-driven positions on certain subjects.

Jaitley, however, hit out at existing "double standards", saying it is not acceptable when one labels demands for constructing the temple in Ayodhya as "communal" and demands for not constructing it as "secular".

The remarks come at a time when there are growing calls, especially from the Hindu right, including BJP's parent RSS and allies like the Shiv Sena, to adopt the ordinance route to build the Ram temple in Ayodhya.

On the Rafale row, Jaitley suggested there has been a "dictational ambiguity", which the Supreme Court judgement vindicating government's stand rests on, and it gives him the "satisfaction" to know that the opposition Congress's case is based on this and nothing else.

"Old case of pricing, procedures, favouritism is now a case of ambiguity," he said, adding that now the ambiguity had been pointed out to the Supreme Court, it would correct the same.

Jaitley said 74 meetings of the committees related to price and contract negotiations were held before signing the final agreement for procurement of 36 Rafale jets from France.

Terming the campaign mounted by the opposition on the multi-crore Rafale deal as "juvenile and illiterate", Jaitley said the final price negotiated in 2015 by the NDA government was nine per cent lower than the one in 2007 for the stand-alone aircraft and 20 per cent lower if one included the weapon systems.

Jaitley said the January 1 violence at Koregaon-Bhima near Pune was fuelled by "Maoists", who were trying to mislead the dalits, and stressed that such an agitation cannot be called as an uprising against the government.

The next election will be about the governance under Prime Minister Narendra Modi and a coalition of rivals where the voters will have to take a risk, Jaitley said, stressing farmer marches were not a widespread movement.

Stressing on the need to continue with the reform process, Jaitley said the Railways ministry had not "reformed really". The extradition of AugustaWestland VVIP chopper scam accused Christian Michel from the UAE shows that India's ability to put pressure on other governments had increased, Jaitley said.

He also hoped for an early extradition of fugitive liquor baron Vijay Mallya from the UK.