India, Sept. 11 -- The Monsoon session of the Rajasthan Assembly ended on Wednesday amid walkouts by Congress legislators, who accused the government of "spying" on the Opposition by installing extra cameras in the House. Despite Speaker Vasudev Devnani's clarification that the cameras were only for video recording and had no audio capability, Congress MLAs staged protests, raised slogans, displayed posters, and boycotted the Question Hour. Former CM Ashok Gehlot also demanded that a probe be initiated into the installation of the cameras. Leader of Opposition Tikaram Jully alleged that the additional cameras amounted to surveillance of Opposition members and demanded to know who had access to the footage. He questioned why the cameras remained on even after the House was adjourned and accused the Speaker of misleading the Opposition. Unsatisfied with the explanation, Congress MLAs stormed into the well of the House, shouted slogans such as "Stop spying on legislators", and marched from the MLA quarters to the Assembly premises in protest against the cameras. The ruckus forced Speaker Devnani to adjourn the House twice. He clarified that cameras had been part of the Assembly since its establishment, that upgrades had been made under the "One Nation, One Application" project, and that none of the devices recorded audio. "There is no invasion of privacy. Such allegations are baseless. Even Parliament functions with cameras," he said. Amid the chaos, the Rajasthan Groundwater Management Authority Bill was passed in the absence of the Opposition. The Bill, which had earlier been referred to a select committee, introduces measures to regulate groundwater extraction. Later, the house also passed The Rajasthan Land Revenue (amendment and validation) Bill, 2025. Chief Minister Bhajanlal Sharma, speaking during the disruptions, accused Congress of indulging in theatrics instead of raising public issues. "Cheap popularity cannot last long. The Opposition's strength is tested when it raises the voice of the people. They could not silence my voice before and will not be able to silence it today.," he said. Sharma further hit out at the Congress, saying the party was pained not by public suffering but by the passage of the anti-conversion bill. "You keep changing costumes to stage drama in the House. The people of Rajasthan can see this. Not a single Congress leader has gone among the people to wipe their tears, while our representatives and officials have reached every village," he said. The CM accused Congress of "appeasement and corruption," warning that the public would soon give its verdict. "You have wasted the Assembly's time for cheap popularity. The people will answer this in the future," he added. Former Rajasthan CM Gehlot stated that invasion of privacy is a serious issue. He demanded that a probe be initiated into the installation of the cameras....