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Indian Govt. clashes with Tamil Nadu over Gandhi killersNEW DELHI, Feb 20 (Reuters) - India’s government was embroiled in a dispute on Thursday with a powerful state that plans to free seven people convicted for the 1991 killing of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, in political jostling ahead of a general election. The assassination by a suicide bomber is an emotional issue for India’s ruling Congress party, led by the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, which is gearing up for an election expected to start in April. Gandhi’s widow, Sonia, is Congress’ president and their son, Rahul, is leading the party’s election campaign. The state of Tamil Nadu plans to release the convicts in what is seen as a pitch for votes by Jayaram Jayalalithaa, chief minister of the southern state where there is some sympathy for the killers’ political motives. Jayalalithaa, who announced the plan on Wednesday, is thought to have national ambitions. “The assassination of Shri Rajiv Gandhi was an attack on the soul of India,” Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said in a statement on Thursday. “The release of the killers of a former prime minister of India and our great leader, as well as several other innocent Indians, would be contrary to all principles of justice.” Gandhi was killed while campaigning in the state by an ethnic Tamil suicide bomber from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), a separatist rebel group from neighbouring Sri Lanka. Twenty-six people were convicted in 1998 for their roles in planning and carrying out the murder. |