Jaipur, Sept. 10 -- The Rajasthan Assembly witnessed repeated uproar on Tuesday after Congress MLAs objected to the installation of extra cameras facing the Opposition benches. Leader of Opposition Tikaram Jully and senior Congress MLA Rajendra Pareek raised strong objections, alleging that the cameras were meant to "spy" on them and invade their privacy. As protests intensified, Congress legislators stormed into the well of the House, shouting slogans. The ruckus forced speaker Vasudev Devnani to adjourn proceedings thrice during the day. During the heated exchanges, Government chief whip Jogeshwar Garg dismissed the Opposition's objections, saying: "The House is not a bedroom or bathroom, it is an open forum where everyone sits in public. How can installing cameras amount to privacy invasion?" His remarks angered Congress MLAs further, prompting demands for an apology. Rajendra Pareek countered that the issue was not about bathrooms but about "targeted surveillance" of Opposition members, which he called "highly objectionable." The speaker attempted to proceed with legislative business amid the commotion, but Congress MLAs continued their protests in the Well, insisting on an apology from Garg. Earlier, tempers had already flared during Question Hour when Tikaram Jully was not allowed to raise a supplementary query related to crimes in Khanpur. Angered by the denial, Congress MLAs shouted slogans in the Well, leading to two adjournments before noon. The Opposition alleged that their leader was being unfairly denied the right to intervene - something traditionally allowed to the Leader of Opposition. The chaos escalated during Zero Hour when marshals were called in, resulting in a scuffle between Congress women MLAs and security personnel. Outside the House, Congress legislators, led by Tikaram Jully, also staged a protest march from MLA quarters to the Assembly, accusing the BJP government of deliberately delaying Panchayati Raj and municipal elections. Jully said, "Despite the constitutional mandate to hold elections every five years, the government is postponing polls out of fear of losing." Amidst the turbulence, an unexpected scene grabbed attention when cabinet minister Kirodi Lal Meena crossed over to sit briefly with the Opposition benches. Rising from his BJP seat during Question Hour, Meena walked over first to BJP MLA Pratap Singh Singhvi's seat and then joined Congress MLA Bhimraj Bhati in the Opposition lobby. Independent MLA Yunus Khan also joined him. Meena was later seen in a long conversation with Congress leader Harish Chaudhary, even as BJP MLAs looked on in surprise. The Assembly eventually resumed debate on bills, but the day remained overshadowed by bitter exchanges over surveillance, denial of Opposition rights, and rising confrontation between the government and Congress benches. Former chief minister Ashok Gehlot on Tuesday accused the BJP government of evading accountability in the Assembly by refusing to hold a debate on the crisis caused by heavy rainfall across Rajasthan. In a post on X, Gehlot said it has been a long-standing tradition that during special circumstances such as natural disasters, drought or floods, governments initiate a debate in the House to gather feedback from legislators across the state. "But in Rajasthan, the government is trying to avoid such discussions. It wants to escape accountability," he said. Gehlot added that more than a dozen districts are reeling under excessive rainfall, yet the government has limited itself to issuing statements instead of allowing a debate. "This shows the BJP government is not at all serious about issues concerning farmers and the common people," he remarked....