A heated confrontation erupted in Parliament after the Leader of the Opposition began quoting excerpts allegedly linked to former Army Chief General Manoj Naravane. Members from the treasury benches objected strongly, questioning the authenticity of the source being cited. They argued that parliamentary convention requires any quoted material—especially books or memoirs—to be officially published and authenticated before being referenced in the House. The Defence Minister intervened, asserting with full confidence that the book being mentioned had not been published, and therefore its contents could not be cited. Ruling party members demanded that the Leader of the Opposition clarify whether the memoir had been officially released. They maintained that references based on magazine articles or unpublished material violate parliamentary decorum. The Opposition countered by stating that excerpts had appeared in The Caravan magazine and were therefore credible. They accused the ruling side of deliberately interrupting the Leader of the Opposition and suppressing debate. Multiple interruptions, cross-talk, and objections followed, prompting repeated appeals to the Speaker for order. The episode highlighted sharp divisions over parliamentary procedure, authenticity of sources, and the limits of debate, as tensions flared over national security references and political accountability.


