Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

ED note makes PFI link to AAP, Cong; poll gimmick, say parties

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

AS PER ED’S INTERNAL INVESTIGAT­ION NOTE, ₹120.5 CRORE WAS CREDITED IN 73 BANK ACCOUNTS MAINTAINED BY PFI; MAJORITY OF THE CREDITS WAS IN ‘CASH’

NEW DELHI: The Popular Front India (PFI), a controvers­ial outfit blamed for violent demonstrat­ions against a new citizenshi­p law in several parts of the country, is in contact with leaders of Delhi’s ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and the Congress and also has links with protests at Shaheen Bagh, an investigat­ion note by the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) alleged on Thursday, triggering a fresh political tussle in the national capital with the AAP and Congress calling it a desperate political gimmick just two days ahead of the assembly polls.

The note, accessed by HT, claimed that the group has its national headquarte­rs at Delhi’s Shaheen Bagh, where a large amount of money has been deposited for its activities and which has emerged as the epicentre of protests against the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, or CAA.

“It is shameful that the BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party] has reduced investigat­ive agencies into political tools,” Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal said. Responding to allegation­s against AAP’S Sanjay Singh, who is a Rajya Sabha member, Kejriwal dared the BJP to arrest and jail Singh for 20 years if there is any evidence. Shaheen Bagh has figured prominentl­y in a bitter campaign for the February 8 elections. The BJP has made it a focal point to hit out at the AAP government and the Congress, who, it says, support the protesters. While AAP has accused the BJP of using a communally charged and divisive rhetoric, a shooting incident near the protest site and claims and countercla­ims over the gunman’s affiliatio­n have further vitiated the campaign.

ED’S internal investigat­ion note said that ₹120.5 crore was credited in 73 bank accounts maintained by PFI, an entity related to it and certain other individual­s. Majority of the credits was in “cash”. It did not, however, specify the dates for the deposits. “In the past several months, out of the donations received by PFI, more than half was received in cash. Out of the cash donations, two-thirds were deposited in bank accounts whereas one-third was kept in PFI’S National Headquarte­rs office situated at G-78 Shaheen Bagh, Delhi,” the ED note said.

The note said Mohammad Parwez Ahmed, PFI’S Delhi president, and other members of the outfit have been seen with anticaa protesters at Shaheen Bagh. It alleged that Ahmed is in touch with AAP’S Singh and several Congress leaders, including Udit

Raj, who quit the BJP ahead of last year’s Lok Sabha elections.

“Where is the evidence? This clearly false informatio­n being spread ahead of the elections. First, the BJP used the Delhi Police to suggest links between the person who fired at Jamia protesters and the AAP. Now, they are using the ED against us ahead of polls,” Singh, who held a 30-minute meeting with Kejriwal on Thursday afternoon, said.

The squabble came a day after the Election Commission took a strong view of the Delhi Police’s revealing what it said was details of the investigat­ion into the shooting incident at Shaheen Bagh last week.

Congress’s Raj said that he has spoken to a few organisers of the Shaheen Bagh protests, pointing out that it does not mean he is funding or organising any protest. “Does speaking to someone prove anything? I have no connection in organising any protests and I have not funded anything,” he said.

Delhi Congress chief Subhash Chopra brushed off the allegation­s as “diversiona­ry tactics” ahead of the polls. “This is all a way to defame our party and our leaders. If they have any proof, let them produce it,” said Chopra.

PFI secretary Anis Ahmed said: “We deny the allegation­s that PFI has funded Shaheen Bagh protests. Our Shaheen Bagh HQ is operating since 2013, and we share [details of] all our finances with the government every year.”

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