Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Protests flare after arrest of Modi rival in India

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NEW DELHI — Hundreds of protesters in India’s capital took to the streets for a second day Saturday, demanding the immediate release of one of the top rivals of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, as the country gears up for a national election next month.

Arvind Kejriwal, New Delhi’s top elected official and one of the country’s most consequent­ial politician­s of the past decade, was arrested by the federal Enforcemen­t Directorat­e on Thursday night. The agency, controlled by Modi’s government, accused his party and ministers of accepting $12 million in bribes from liquor contractor­s nearly two years ago.

His Aam Aadmi Party, or Common Man’s Party, denied the accusation­s and said Friday that Kejriwal would remain Delhi’s chief minister as it took the matter to court.

Kejriwal was taken into custody for seven days following a court order on Friday.

Kejriwal’s wife, Sunita, had a message Saturday she said was from her detained husband. Posted on the AAP party’s account on X, formerly Twitter, the message relayed Kerijwal as saying he wasn’t surprised by the arrest for he has “struggled a lot” and warning against “several forces within and outside India that are weakening the country.”

Chanting “Kejriwal is Modi’s doom” and “Dictatorsh­ip won’t be tolerated,” protesters accused Modi on Saturday of governing the country under a state of emergency — a claim the opposition has long professed — and using federal law enforcemen­t agencies to stifle opposition parties before the election.

AAP leader and chief minister of neighborin­g Punjab state, Bhagwant Mann, joined the protest alongside some cabinet ministers.

“[Kejriwal’s arrest] is a murder of democracy,” Balbir Singh, Punjab’s health minister, told The Associated Press. “For opposition leaders, jail is the rule and bail is the exception,” he added. Singh also accused Modi’s ruling party of having “turned the rule of law upside down.”

Lily Tiga, a protester, said when “a person who does good, fights for truth, fights for the downtrodde­n and poor is arrested, it’s not only unfortunat­e, it is a time to mourn for this country.”

Some demonstrat­ors tried to move the protest to the main street in central Delhi. But police, some in riot gear, blocked them and detained at least three dozen protesters.

On Friday, hundreds of AAP supporters and some senior party leaders clashed with the police, who whisked a number of them away in buses.

In the lead-up to the general election, starting April 19, India’s opposition parties have accused the government of misusing its power to harass and weaken its political opponents, pointing to a spree of raids, arrests and corruption investigat­ions against key opposition figures. Meanwhile, some probes against erstwhile opposition leaders who later defected to Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party have been dropped.

BJP denies targeting the opposition and says law enforcemen­t agencies act independen­tly.

AAP is part of a broad alliance of opposition parties called INDIA, the main challenger to BJP in the coming election.

His arrest is another setback for the bloc, and came after the country’s main opposition Congress party accused the government Thursday of freezing its bank accounts in a tax dispute to cripple it. This has led to a rare show of strength by the opposition figures who slammed the move as undemocrat­ic and accused Modi’s party of misusing the agency to undermine them.

In 2023, the agency arrested Kejriwal’s deputy, Manish Sisodia, and AAP lawmaker Sanjay Singh as part of the same case. Both remain in jail.

 ?? (AP/Altaf Qadri) ?? Security personnel detain supporters of the Aam Admi Party, or Common Man’s Party, during a protest against the arrest of their party leader Arvind Kejriwal in New Delhi on Saturday.
(AP/Altaf Qadri) Security personnel detain supporters of the Aam Admi Party, or Common Man’s Party, during a protest against the arrest of their party leader Arvind Kejriwal in New Delhi on Saturday.

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