One of the write-ups in Hindi journal "Congress Darshan" blamed Nehru for "the state of affairs in Kashmir, China and Tibet", while another made the controversial remarks about Congress president Sonia Gandhi's parent.
As BJP, still smarting from repeated disruptions of Parliament by the Congress that saw important bills like the one on GST getting stuck, gloated over rival's discomfiture, saying the "truth" it had been hiding had come out, the main opposition party claimed the magazine was not its "mouthpiece".
One of the articles, a tribute to the country's first home minister Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, had references to the "strained" relations between him and Nehru.
The article cited a letter Patel had purportedly written in 1950 to caution Nehru against China's policy towards Tibet wherein he had described China as "unfaithful and a future enemy of India".
Another piece, which focused on Sonia, described her early life and her "ambition to become an airhostess". It termed her father a "fascist soldier" who, the article claimed, was a member of the Italian forces that lost to the Russians in the World War II.
"Sonia Gandhi's father Stephano Maino was a former fascist soldier," the article claimed and described her rapid rise in the Congress hierarchy.
Nirupam, who initially distanced himself from the articles, later admitted the "mistake".
"I do not agree with the article. It seems to have been sourced, but I don't know who the writer(s) is," said Nirupam but later admitted the "mistake".
Delighted at Congress's plight, senior BJP leader and
Union Minister Prakash Javadekar, in a left-handed compliment, "congratulated" Nirupam and quipped the former MP from Mumbai was known for such write-ups when he was the editor of the Hindi edition Shiv Sena mouthpiece 'Dopahar Ka Saamana'.
"Patel merged 562 provinces into India and Nehru was in charge of only Kashmir and it remains a problem. Patel had warned about China's betrayal on Tibet... This is not BJP or Javadekar saying so but the mouthpiece of Congress. What Congress had been hiding has come out. I congratulate Sanjay Nirupam," Javadekar told a press conference in Delhi.
"We have nothing to do with this publication. It was a defunct magazine that was trying to revive. That is not our mouthpiece. We have nothing to do with this publication. This magazine has not been associated with Congress," party spokesman Tom Vadakkan told reporters in Delhi.
Vadakkan said Congress had appointed Nirupam as MRCC chief and not the editor of any magazine and also distanced the party from the sacking the magazine editor.
"What does he do in his personal capacity is his responsibility. In his personal capacity, he can be editor of any magazine and decide to keep or sack any employee. The party has nothing to do with it," he said.
Notwithstanding Congress's claim of having nothing to do with the publication, BJP secretary Shrikant Sharma questioned the sacking of the magazine's content editor Suraj Joshi, saying it showed the party's "intolerance against truth" as most of what had appeared was a "matter of fact".
Javadekar quoted from the write-up, which criticised Nehru's Kashmir and China policies, while lavishing praise on Patel, as he sought to further embarrass Congress.
"Congress mouthpiece would never write about Patel. And now when it has written, it has written only truth," he said, claiming that leaders outside Nehru-Gandhi family like P V Narasimha Rao, Lal Bahadur Shastri besides Patel never got "justice" from it, a party of "one family".
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