
200 Opposition MPs to Urge PM Modi for Special Session Over Recent Kashmir Incidents
More than 200 lawmakers from the Opposition from both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha will write to the Prime Secretary Narendra Modi to demand a special session of the Parliament to examine issues related to the Pahalgam attack 2025 as well as Operation Sindoor.
The move follows 20 high-ranking leaders, including two leaders of the Opposition Rahul Gandhi, Mallikarjun Kharge. Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav and Trinamool's Abhishek Banerjee wrote the PM asking for an extra sessi
The government has stated that it will not be holding any special session. Minister of Parliamentary Affairs Kiren Rijiju announced that the monsoon session would begin on July 21 and will end on the 12th of August. Lok Sabha authorities told HT that there isn't any announcement for a special session.
In response to the announcement of the government the Trinamool Congress's Derek O'Brien said, "TMC has looked over the announcements in the past and the typical session is announced 19 days prior to the date for its start. This time they made the announcement 47 days earlier. So scared!
If they are able to make an announcement about that they will be announcing Monsoon Session, why not to have a Opposition MPs Modi letter or special Parliament session demand in June."
Functionaries discussed how they believe the demand for a separate session also has reopened the communication channel among Gandhi Banerjee and Gandhi. Banerjee. A top official said that Gandhi had a conversation with Banerjee who is currently on the delegation, and discussed the necessity of an approach that is joint to call for an open session.
Although TMC is not an official ally of the Congress however, discussions between the two top leaders could result in greater collaboration between both parties in the coming session.
Under the direction of the Prime Narendra Modi, the Prime Minister Narendra Modi, our efforts are aimed at ensuring that Viksit Bharat is a Green Bharat and a country that is climate-resilient.

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Op Sindoor: Pakistan's Jacobabad airbase hangar that India hit covered with tarpaulin, show satellite images
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NDTV
39 minutes ago
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'Rajnath Aam': Newly Developed Mango Variety Named After Defence Minister Rajnath Singh
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Indian Express
an hour ago
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Congress contacted me about demand for special Parliament session, told them not the right time: Supriya Sule
Having broken ranks with the opposition on their demand for a special session of Parliament to discuss the developments following the Pahalgam terror attack, NCP (SP) MP Supriya Sule on Friday said the Congress had contacted her when she was abroad heading the all-party delegation and she told them to wait as it was 'not the right time to ask the government hard questions'. 'It was time for the country to show a united face,' she said. 'While I was abroad as a part of the delegation, the Congress contacted me. I said I cannot join them as I am away and told them to wait till all the delegations return. I told them, let's have a meeting and decide after I return, but it happened before I returned. That is why I could not sign the letter to the Prime Minister,' Sule told The Indian Express. Earlier this week, 16 Opposition parties led by the Congress wrote to Modi demanding a special session, saying 'there are serious questions facing the nation about the terror attack, killing of civilians in Poonch, Uri and Rajouri, the ceasefire announcements, and the implications on our national security and foreign policy'. 'We have supported the government's efforts to engage with the international community on India's position. The government has briefed foreign nations and the media, but not Parliament – keeping the people of India and their elected representatives in the dark,' the Opposition parties said. The NCP (SP) was not a signatory to the letter. Asked whether that was the reason for her party not signing the letter, Sule said, 'That's exactly because… you have to understand the factual situation. I was out. (Sharad) Pawar sahab had already made the statement that till the entire operation is over that the NCP will stand by the government. We will not say a word against the government. This is not the time to do petty politics. This is an issue of India's larger interest. So country comes first, then the state, then the party and then family.' Sule said the country comes first and India must send a message to the world that we are united against any terror attack. 'Pawar sahab had made it very clear. We were expecting that when the July session comes, hopefully everything will be settled by then, then we can definitely debate it. Because in a vibrant democracy, every issue must be debated, but there has to be a right time for it.' Saying that Pawar had made it clear that Operation Sindoor was ongoing and no special session was required till it finishes, Sule said her party was with the government on sensitive issues. 'Once the operation is over, we will ask the government hard questions, but not now. This is not the moment, especially when we were all out of India. We were telling the world more information, giving the facts to the world. Then we cannot ask questions. See, it's country first, then the state, then the party and then your family,' she said. Sule and the members of her delegation — they travelled to Egypt, Qatar, Ethiopia and South Africa — met External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Friday and provided him with feedback about their interactions. 'It's a lot of learning and we have come with a lot of feedback for the government. The countries which we visited were very, very supportive, and stand united and very strongly with the government of India or any terror attack anywhere in the world,' she said. Sule said her party would 'definitely ask' the government questions during the Monsoon session. 'Of course, I think India will ask questions, not just the NCP (SP). India will ask questions. India wants to know a lot of answers. It is not just about the NCP (SP), India wants to know.'