India
-Krishna Kripa
AAP
chief
Saurabh
Bharadwaj
criticised
Delhi
Police’s
latest
prohibitory
orders,
calling
them
a
“Tughlaqi
farmaan.” He
demanded
their
withdrawal,
arguing
they
had been
meant
to
ban
Hindu
festivals
and
offend
non secular
sentiments
earlier than
Navratri.
The
police
issued
these
orders
on
Monday,
limiting
gatherings
of
5
or
extra
individuals
in
central
and
border
areas
for
six
days
due
to
regulation
and
order
issues.
The
prohibitory
order
was
enacted
below
part
163,
beforehand
part
144
of
the
CrPC,
as
half
of
the
Bharatiya
Nagrik
Suraksha
Sanhita.
Bharadwaj
accused
Lieutenant
Governor
V
Okay
Saxena
of
failing
to
handle
the
metropolis’s
regulation
and
order
successfully.
He
described
the
order
as
“laughable
and
irresponsible,” claiming
it
aimed
to
disrupt
Hindu
festivals
and
harass
Delhi
residents.
Issues
Over
Spiritual
Sentiments
Bharadwaj
acknowledged
that
the
police
had been
deliberately
concentrating on
Hindus’
non secular
sentiments
by
imposing
restrictions
comparable
to
a
curfew
simply
earlier than
Navratri.
He
questioned
whether or not
Delhi
Police
would
arrest
harmless
devotees
since
gatherings
of
5
or
extra
are
prohibited.
“Do
Hindus
not
have
the
proper
to
rejoice
their
festivals
below
the
BJP’s
administration?” he
requested.
The
AAP
chief
questioned
the
rationale
behind
the
prohibitory
order,
which
cited
MCD
and
DUSU
polls,
VIP
actions,
and
elections
in
Jammu
and
Kashmir
and
Haryana
as
causes.
He
argued
that
these
causes
had been
inadequate
to
justify
banning
festivals
in
Delhi
when
elections
had been
occurring
elsewhere.
Regulation
and
Order
Issues
Bharadwaj
additionally
raised
issues
about
the
deteriorating
regulation
and
order
state of affairs
in
Delhi.
He
claimed
that
a number of
gangsters
had been
extorting
cash
from
merchants
and
businessmen
in
the
nationwide
capital.
He
talked about
an
extortion
message
acquired
by
a
BJP
chief
in
Uttam
Nagar
as
proof
that
even
BJP
leaders
had been
not
protected.
AAP
nationwide
convener
and
former
Delhi
chief
minister
Arvind
Kejriwal
expressed
his
worries
about
the
worsening
regulation
and
order
state of affairs
in
a
publish
on
X.
His
assertion
highlighted
rising
issues
over
security
in
the
capital
metropolis.
Bharadwaj’s
remarks
replicate
broader
issues
about
sustaining
public
security
whereas
respecting
non secular
freedoms.
The
debate
continues
over
balancing
safety
measures
with
residents’
rights
to
rejoice
cultural
occasions
with out
undue
restrictions.