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Friday, February 13, 1998 Published at 18:11 GMT Despatches Sonia goes on the attack at Bangalore rally ![]() Sonia Gandhi surrounded by party officials arrives in Bangalore
Sonia Gandhi, the widow of the assassinated former Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, has strongly attacked those who have alleged she and her late husband were implicated in a scandal involving kick-backs from a big arms deal in the 1980s. Mrs Gandhi was speaking at an election campaign rally in
the Southern city of Bangalore. Our correspondent Daniel Lak was at the rally
A crowd estimated at several tens of thousands cheered wildly as Mrs Gandhi said all information about the Bofors scandal should be made public.
Only
then, she said, would her husband's name be cleared.
Her entry into the election campaign late last year buoyed a sagging
Congress Party but opposing political parties threatened to make the Bofors
affair into an election issue. Her words in Bangalore will go a long way
towards blunting that attack.
Election hotting up with a month to go
The Congress Party's main opponent -- the
Hindu nationalist BJP -- has been campaigning the hardest so far. Observers
say their campaign has been the most focussed on issues and the most well
organised.
But with a month to go before the first day of voting in the
general election it is still far too early to say who has the upper hand.
Mrs Gandhi began her campaign earlier this week with her daughter Priyanka at a rally just outside Madras, close to the site of Rajiv Gandhi's assassination.
Together with her daughter Priyanka, she paid tribute to a husband and a father whose death still causes obvious pain in the family left behind. Mrs Gandhi has been an enigmatic but influential figure on the Indian scene since then, saying little except about the need to resolve her husband's killing.
Offers to lead the Congress Party by its ageing leadership have been consistently rebuffed. Many wonder if Mrs Gandhi is keeping her connections alive in case her daughter takes up the Nehru Gandhi family mantle some day.
Now Sonia Gandhi's campaign is well underway. The rallies in Bangalore and across India are being watched closely to see if the magic of the family dynasty can actually substitute for the absence of substantive issues in this election.
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