When Arvind Kejriwal claimed that the Haryana government had contaminated the Yamuna, Amit Shah chastised him. Shah pushed Kejriwal to reveal proof for his assertions.
Arvind Kejriwal was criticized by Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Tuesday for making a false accusation against the Haryana government for allegedly mixing poison in the Yamuna. The Aam Aadmi Party leader was also asked to release the Delhi Jal Board report that he used to support the charge.
Prior to the Delhi assembly election, Amit Shah addressed a public gathering in the Kalkaji assembly constituency and challenged Arvind Kejriwal to reveal to the citizens of the nation’s capital the name of the toxin he said was present in the Yamuna.
Another challenge was made to the former Delhi chief minister by the senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader, who asked him to present the official order in which he requested that the “poisonous” Yamuna water be stopped from entering Delhi in order to protect the city’s citizens.
“Winning and losing are necessary components of the electoral process, Kejriwal ji. In an attempt to intimidate the Delhi population, you made a false front by accusing the Haryana government of putting poison in the Yamuna. “This is as dirty as politics gets,” Amit Shah remarked in his criticism.
With Arvind Kejriwal claiming that the ruling BJP in Haryana was attempting to harm people by putting “poison” in the river, the AAP accused the party on Monday of “intentionally” dumping industrial garbage into the Yamuna.
However, Kejriwal’s accusation was denied by Delhi Jal Board (DJB) CEO Shilpa Shinde in a letter to Delhi Chief Secretary Dharmendra, who described the assertion as “factually incorrect, without basis, and misleading.”
Shah accused AAP leaders of lying and claimed that Kejriwal was the most prone to breaching commitments.
Delhi residents have a great chance to rid themselves of this ‘AAPda’ on February 5. Give the BJP your vote. win the Kalkaji seat for Ramesh Bidhuri. “Kalkaji will be ranked first in Delhi,” Shah informed the audience.
The 70-member Delhi legislature will hold elections on February 5 and count the ballots on February 8.
Kejriwal criticizes public funds being used for large corporations or the average person. The BJP.
On Tuesday, Arvind Kejriwal unleashed a scathing attack on the BJP, portraying the forthcoming Delhi elections as a decision between utilizing public funds to support large corporations and the wellbeing of the majority.
At a rally in the Ghonda constituency of northeast Delhi, Kejriwal charged that the ruling BJP at the federal level had misused taxpayer funds by approving loans totaling ₹10 lakh crore for 400 large firms. He also pledged that the AAP will keep funding public welfare programs.
“This election is about deciding where our public money goes — whether it should be used for the common people or given away to the big corporates who have benefitted from loan waivers,” added the politician.