Sonia Gandhi Slams Centre’s Stand On Khamenei Death, Adds Kashmir Reminder; Calls It Abdication

New Delhi : Congress Parliamentary Party chairperson Sonia Gandhi on Tuesday said its silence on the targeted assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is not neutral but an abdication, and raises serious doubts about the direction. The former Congress president also demanded that when Parliament reconvenes for the second part of the Budget session.
Gandhi said there is an urgent need for us to rediscover the moral strength and articulate it with clarity and commitment. On March 1, Iran confirmed that its Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Seyed Ali Hosseini Khamenei, had been assassinated in targeted strikes carried out the previous day by the United States and Israel. The killing of a sitting head of state in the midst of ongoing negotiations marks a grave rupture in contemporary international relations, Gandhi said.
The Government of India has refrained from condemning the assassination or the violation of Iranian sovereignty, she noted. Initially, ignoring the massive US-Israeli onslaught, the Prime Minister (Narendra Modi) confined himself to condemning Iran’s retaliatory strike on the UAE without addressing the sequence of events that preceded it. Later, he uttered platitudes about his ‘deep concern’ and talked of ‘dialogue and diplomacy’ — which is precisely what was underway before the massive unprovoked attacks launched by Israel and the US, Gandhi said.
Article 2 (4) of the United Nations Charter prohibits the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state. A targeted killing of a serving head of state strikes at the heart of these principles, she said. If such acts pass without principled objection from the world’s largest democracy, the erosion of international norms becomes easier to normalise, she argued.
The Prime Minister returned from a visit to Israel, where he reiterated unequivocal support for the government of Benjamin Netanyahu, even as the Gaza conflict continues to draw global outrage over the scale of civilian casualties, many of them women and children,” Gandhi said. At a time when much of the Global South, along with major powers and India’s partners in BRICS such as Russia and China, have kept their distance, India’s high-profile political endorsement without moral clarity marks a visible and troubling departure, she said.
Gandhi pointed out that the Congress has unequivocally condemned the bombings and targeted assassinations on Iranian soil, describing them as a dangerous escalation with grave regional and global consequences. We have extended condolences to the Iranian people and to Shia communities worldwide, reiterating that India’s foreign policy is anchored in the peaceful settlement of disputes, as reflected in Article 51 of the Constitution of India. These principles ‘ sovereign equality, non-intervention and the promotion of peace ‘ have historically been integral to India’s diplomatic identity.
His (Vajpayee’s) acknowledgement of those long-standing relations seems to hold no relevance for our current government,” she said. Noting that India’s ties with Israel have, in recent years, expanded across defence, agriculture and technology, the Congress leader said it is precisely because India maintains relations with both Tehran and Tel Aviv that it possesses diplomatic space to urge restraint.
This is not merely a moral proposition; it is a strategic necessity. Nearly 10 million Indians live and work across the Gulf. In past crises – from the Gulf War to Yemen to Iraq and Syria – India’s ability to safeguard its citizens has rested on its credibility as an independent actor, not as a proxy, she argued. The appropriate forum for resolving this dissonance is Parliament. When it reconvenes, this disturbing silence over the breakdown of international order must be debated openly and without evasion,” Gandhi said.
The targeted killing of a foreign head of state, the erosion of international norms, and the widening instability in West Asia are not peripheral matters; they touch directly upon India’s strategic interests and moral commitments, she asserted. A clear articulation of India’s position is overdue. Democratic accountability demands no less, and strategic clarity requires it,” Gandhi said.
Read Also : Iran Claims Its Missiles Hit Netanyahu’s Office, How Did Conflict Expand To Lebanon After Khamenei’s Death?



