Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar, replying to the debate on the Governor's address, told the Assembly that a reference in this regard has been pending for long and the state would seek for its early hearing.
"The state government has decided to file a fresh suit in the Supreme Court after taking legal advice on this matter to declare the Termination of Agreements Act passed by Punjab Assembly as null and void," Khattar said.
Replying to the debate during the ongoing budget session of Haryana Assembly here late this evening, Khattar said in 2004, when the then Congress government led by Amarinder Singh in Punjab had brought the Punjab Termination of Agreements Act-2004 in Punjab Assembly, "the (Haryana) BJP had strongly protested against the Bill".
"At that time Congress was in power in the state as well as in the Centre. Even then the Central government did not take any step to prevent the Punjab government to pass this Act," he said in his two-hour reply.
Citing example of "Congress utter neglect of the interest of the state on SYL issue", Khattar took a dig at former chief minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda, who was present in the House.
Khattar attacked Hooda, who recently released a book written by former Advocate General of Punjab Harbhagwan Singh.
"Harbhagwan Singh in his book had claimed that he advised the then Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh to bring Punjab Termination of Agreements Act 2004 in Punjab Vidhan Sabha," Khattar told the House, adding that Hooda had gone ahead and released his book.
Under the Rajiv Longowal Accord, Chandigarh was to be transferred to Punjab, Khattar told the House.
"However, as a result of our protest against this accord also, the transfer of Chandigarh to Punjab could not materialise," he said.
He reminded that several resolutions were passed in the Haryana Assembly on SYL issue in the past and sent to Central government but all went in vain and futile.
He exhorted all the members of the House to rise above "narrow politics" and fight for this cause together.
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