"India is a Hindu nation. There is no doubt about it. It was a Hindu nation and always stay a Hindu nation," D'Souza, a senior BJP leader said reacting to the controversy triggered by his cabinet colleague Dipak Dhavalikar.
Dhavalikar, whose party Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party is an ally of state's ruling BJP, had yesterday said he was confident India will develop as a Hindu nation under Prime Minister Modi.
The Deputy Chief Minister said that Dhavalikar's statement has been misunderstood.
"India is a Hindu country. India is Hindustan. All Indians in Hindustan are Hindus including me. I am a Christian Hindu. I am a Hindustani. So you don't have to make India a Hindu nation," he argued.
D'Souza said, "people are free to make controversies out of anything. India is a free country. We have to take everybody together, it is inclusive democracy."
As Speaker Rajendra Arlekar refused to entertain their demand, Congress MLAs staged a walkout.
Later, Leader of Opposition Pratapsingh Rane termed Dhavalikar's statement as violative of the Constitution.
"As a minister, he has taken an oath bearing faith and allegiance to the Constitution which says India is a secular country. He has violated the Constitution," Rane said.
Former Chief Minister Digambar Kamat said, "Indian Constitution takes everybody together. This is a democratic and secular country. Such comments are unwarranted."
"A minister is supposed to remain secular. There is a systematic agenda behind this madness. This has been done looking at the upcoming elections in some states. This is an attempt was to polarize votes," he said.
