The ruling party also sought to blame the Congress for playing communal politics and challenged it to come up with proof to substantiate its allegations or seek an apology from the people of the country.
The BJP accused Congress leaders of making such statements out of frustration and said it would not be able to stop the government from its development agenda and taking the country forward.
"That is why Congress has suffered a major setback in the recent elections and they should introspect. Stop such baseless allegations," Parliamentary Affairs Minister Venkaiah Naidu said.
BJP general secretary Rajiv Pratap Rudy said he did not know from where Gandhi had got the numbers regarding the communal incidents.
"I do not know where does the Congress president get these numbers from. But of course she has failed to recall the fact that all these communal incidents which, they are talking about has happened in Uttar Pradesh. They should make an answer to the people of this country," he said.
Minister of State in PMO Jitendra Singh said one should not attach much importance to the remarks as one lives in the "evidence-based era of arguments" and that the Prime Minister and Home Minister had already made its position clear on this.
Attacking Modi Government over communal violence, Gandhi claimed today there has been an increase in such incidents in parts of the country since it came to power and charged this was part of a "deliberate attempt" to divide the people on religious lines.
Gandhi was speaking at a party forum in Thiruvananthapuram for the first time after Congress' debacle in the Lok Sabha polls and her attack came days after Rahul Gandhi alleged that communal conflicts in Uttar Pradesh have been "deliberately engineered" and had stormed into the well of Lok Sabha.
