Jaitley also took on Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, accusing his Aam Aadmi Party government of giving advertisements to only "friendly" media and not to the media houses that are critical.
In an interview to Times Now, the senior BJP leader maintained that 'Ram Mandir' will not be made an electoral issue in UP, where assembly elections are due next year, and his party is not looking to polarise the state to win votes.
"We don't want in anyway to communalise or polarise the election, but if there is even some evidence of migration taking place from Kairana, it's an important issue that the state government there must address it," he said.
Asked about the statements being made by some BJP leaders from the region, Jaitley said, "At the end of the day, whatever statements are made in public domain are in public domain.
"But, I only tell you ultimately it is the party president who determines the stand of the party and therefore as far as electoral strategy of UP is concerned....
On another controversy surrounding the censor board and on whether its chief Pahlaj Nihalani would be sacked, Jaitley who also holds charge of Information and Broadcasting Ministry said, "I am reasonably certain, that once we are able to announce those new guidelines (for Central Board of Film Certification), the roles of individuals will get diluted.
"How to deal with the individuals, I think you should trust the government. The government will deal with them and advise restraint or take whatever appropriate action is required in the matter," he said.
General Najeeb Jung was interfering in his work, Jaitley said Delhi was not a state but a union territory.
"It is the seat of the central government... Can we have a Union Territory which says we will bypass LG? Senior bureaucrats are not willing to serve Delhi...It's a historic opportunity for AAP to perform and govern...You have do your function through LG," he said.
He said, "There are several non-BJP state governments in the country but "one union territory behaves as if it has absolute power.I think what has happened in Delhi is constitutional monstrosity".
"British government has taken a position that if you enter the Britain with a valid passport, then we are not going to deport a person, you come in by way of extradition. And conventionally they have been very slow and reluctant in extraditing people.
"And I think where you criticise the government of India, we can take all the steps but ultimately we can not physically lift an individual and bring him back. Well I only hope that the British government had realised that absconders in one jurisdiction can't make a heaven in another jurisdiction. This is not civility. And this is not certainly British civility."
"Probably at that stage, somebody thought may be we give him a new lease of life. They never knew Mallya's intention that one day he will disappear."
He also said that any agency must go through the entire transactions before filing any FIR or chargesheet and they go through possibility of any siphoning of money.
"Create that evidence and then move the chargesheet or FIR, as without evidence they will end up with egg on their face. Therefore, what the agencies are doing is that they are independently investigating the matter, going through the entire records... Banks themselves have been running from pillar to post ..."
On Subramanian Swamy's attack on RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan, Jaitley said some people are "outspoken" but it has been more than adequately clarified this was not the party's position.
"Let me make it very clear that when this statement about the RBI Governor was made, I had publicly disagreed, Venkaiah Naidu made a statement publicly disagreeing with it and then the party president Amit Shah made a statement that this is not a party position. Now, some people are more outspoken and therefore speak their mind out. The others remain more conventional about it," he said.
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