
Tiruvannamalai (Tamil Nadu), April 4 AIADMK chief Edappadi K Palaniswami urged Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M K Stalin to direct his anger towards his party leader A Raja for allegedly making a remark that his father M Karunanidhi was "detained at home" in his final days, and said that he would order a state-led investigation into the viral audio when the AIADMK forms the government after the April 23 polls.
Referring to his earlier comments on the subject, Palaniswami said he had quoted the viral audio in which DMK deputy general secretary A Raja purportedly claimed that Stalin had kept his father "under house arrest" during his final days. Also, Stalin's elder brother and former union minister M K Alagiri had gone on record saying that "my father is being held as a prisoner," Palaniswami said at an election rally in Arani in the district.
"Mr. Stalin, don't direct your anger at me; direct it at your deputy general secretary and former union minister A Raja, who released the audio that went viral. I mentioned what Raja said in his audio message. Why should you be annoyed? Show your anger at Raja, and he will tell the truth. There's no point in showing your displeasure with me," Palaniswami said.
After the audio went viral, members of the DMK party and the public were debating whether the incident had actually happened or not. "I had only said what Raja had disclosed. Is it fair to confine your own father, who made you the working president of DMK, to his house during his last days? Your elder brother Alagiri had said that his father was being held as a prisoner," the former chief minister said.
Recalling Stalin's promise ahead of the 2021 Assembly election on ordering a probe into the 2016 death of former Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa and her 75-day hospitalisation, Palaniswami said, "You said you will order a probe into the former chief minister's demise. Karunanidhi is also a former chief minister. The AIADMK will order a state-led probe into the Raja's audio and take appropriate legal action," Palaniswami said.
The chief minister, however, dismissed the allegation as baseless and offensive and cautioned Palaniswami to restrict his criticism to his (Stalin's) performance as chief minister. Stalin said his father was resting due to age-related ailments and that Palaniswami "crossed all red lines."
The AIADMK general secretary also cautioned Stalin to maintain a political decorum in criticizing him.
Also, appropriate action will be taken on the officials whose actions led to the acquittal of former DMK minister K Ponmudi in the 2012 red sand quarry case, he said.
A Villupuram court has earlier this week acquitted Ponmudi and six others on the grounds of "weak evidence" submitted by the district administration.