An Odisha government booklet describing Mahatma Gandhi's death as an "accident" has triggered a row as both Congress and ruling Biju Janata Dal (BJD) members condemned the matter in the state Assembly on Friday (15 November).
Congress legislature party leader Narasingh Mishra demanded an apology from Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik holding him responsible for the blunder.
"This is deplorable. I hold the Chief Minister responsible for this. He should beg an apology to the people. If he has knowingly done it, I demand his resignation. People of the country can never excuse him," said Mishra in the Assembly.
The two-page booklet "Aama Bapuji: Eka Jhalaka" (Our Bapuji: A Glimpse) prepared by state school and mass education department said Mahatma Gandhi died due to accidental reasons on 30 January, 1948.
The brochure published on the occasion of 150th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi said he died due to accidental reasons in a sudden sequence of events on 30 January, 1948 at Delhi's Birla House.
"What does it mean? It means that Odisha government has accepted that Godse is not the assassin of Mahatma Gandhi even though he has already been hanged. This is unfortunate," said Mishra.
Since some Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders are describing Nathuram Godse, who assassinated Gandhi, as God, it seems the BJD is influenced by the ideology, said Mishra.
He slammed both the BJP and BJD saying that both are two sides of the same coin.
BJD member Soumya Ranjan Patnaik also condemned the misrepresentation of the way the Mahatma was assassinated.
He said it is conspiracy to recreate history and all should condemn by rising above political consideration, said Patnaik.
Following discussion, Speaker Surya Narayan Patro directed the government to give a reply on Saturday (16 November).
Meanwhile, the state government has ordered a probe into the incident.
"Whoever has done it would be taken to task. The death of Mahatma should have been clearly mentioned the way he was killed. It should have been elaborated clearly how he was killed," school and mass education minister Samir Ranjan Dash told media.
(This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.)