Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi on Thursday alleged that India's energy security has been "compromised" due to a "flawed" foreign policy and that the government has "bartered" to the US the right to determine relationships with different oil suppliers.
Raising the issue in the Lok Sabha, Gandhi said the war between the US-Israel and Iran is going to have far-reaching consequences.
"The central artery from where 20 pc of global oil flows, Strait of Hormuz, has been closed and this is going to have tremendous repercussions, particularly for us because a very large portion of our oil and natural gas comes through the Strait of Hormuz," Gandhi said.
"The pain has just started -- restaurants are closing, there is widespread panic about LPG, street vendors are affected and as I said, this is only the beginning," the former Congress president said.
The foundation of every single nation is its energy security, Gandhi asserted.
"I do not say this lightly, but allowing the US to decide who we buy oil, gas from... whether we buy oil from Russia or not, whether our relationship with different oil suppliers can be decided by us, this is what has been bartered," the Congress leader said.
"This is a very puzzling fact for me, this is a very puzzling fact as to why a nation the size of India would allow the president of any other nation to give us permission to buy Russian oil, to decide who our relationships are with," the leader of opposition (LoP) said in an apparent reference to the US giving a 30-day waiver to buy oil from Russia.
"This has been a puzzle and I have been trying to figure this puzzle out. I have figured the puzzle out.
"The puzzle is about compromise," he said and referred to Petroleum Minister Hardeep Puri.
Gandhi then sought to link the issue of India's energy security with US Department of Justice disclosures. This evoked an uproar from the treasury benches.
Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla asked Gandhi to speak on the notice he has given and not deviate to other topics.
With Gandhi repeatedly asserting that what he was saying was connected with energy security, Birla asked Puri to make his statement.
Union Minister Kiren Rijiju hit out at Gandhi for speaking in the Lok Sabha on "various other issues" instead of concerns over the reported LPG shortage. After Gandhi's speech in the House, Rijiju told reporters that the Congress has not learnt any lesson after the two-day discussion on the no-confidence motion against Speaker Birla.
The minister said Gandhi submitted a letter to the speaker stating that he wanted to discuss the reported LPG shortage. Subsequently, the petroleum minister was asked to prepare a response, he said.
Rijiju alleged that when Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Hardeep Singh Puri was giving a statement, Gandhi "again sent all his MPs to the well".
Meanwhile, speaking in the Lok Sabha, BJP member Nishikant Dubey claimed that Gandhi held a picnic near Makar Dwar by having tea and coffee with MPs, violating the directives of the speaker.
Earlier, speaking with reporters in the Parliament House complex, Gandhi alleged that India's energy security has been compromised due to a "flawed" foreign policy.
He said Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government must prepare in advance. If not, crores will suffer in the future, he said amid reports of LPG shortages.
Gandhi alleged that PM Modi is unable to function as the prime minister of India as "he is trapped". But he still needs to make sure that the people of India are protected and "our energy security is managed by us", he told reporters in the Parliament House complex.
Basically, gas and fuel are going to be a problem because "our energy security has been compromised", Gandhi said.
"A flawed foreign policy has created this problem. Now, what we have to do is to prepare. You have some time, he said.
Gandhi said the government and the prime minister must immediately start the preparations because otherwise crores of people will suffer massive losses.
"It is a bigger issue than Iran allowing oil and not allowing oil. This war is fundamentally about the current world order... We are going into an unstable time. When you are going into an unstable time, you have to change your mindset," Gandhi said.