India's Rahul, Priyanka released after brief detention
Congress leader was leading a march towards ECI office in New Delhi
Indian Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, his siter Priyanka Gandhi Vadra and other lawmakers were released on Monday evening after brief detention by New Delhi Police during their protest march against the Election Commission of India's (ECI) office over "voter fraud" allegations, Indian media reported.
Apart from Rahul and his sister Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, the New Delhi Police detained several opposition members of parliament (MPs).
"This fight is not political [...] it is to save the Constitution. The fight is for 'one person, one vote,'" NDTV reported Rahul as saying while being shifted by the police.
Confirming the opposition leaders' detention, Joint Commissioner of Police Deepak Purohit said that the politicians had been taken to a nearby police station.
The police officer, citing reasons behind their detention, said that the opposition lacked the necessary permission to hold a protest of such scale and that only 30 MPs were allowed to march towards the ECI office and lodge a complaint.
Purohit's remarks come after the INC-led Indian National Developmental Inclusive Alliance (INDIA) commenced a march towards the ECI office.
Later, the opposition’s lawmakers, including Lok Sabha Leader of Opposition (LoP) Rahul and Congress MP Priyanka, returned to the parliament after their release to protest against alleged “vote theft”.
The credibility of elections has rarely been questioned in recent decades in the world's most populous democracy.
Some analysts say the opposition accusations could damage Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he navigates one of the toughest periods of his 11 years in office.
Around 300 opposition leaders, including Rahul Gandhi of the main opposition Congress party, marched from parliament to the office of the independent election panel but were stopped by police some distance away.
The protesters shouted slogans against the panel and Modi's government, saying elections were being "stolen", and tried to push past barricades before being detained and taken away in buses.
"This fight is not political. This fight is to save the constitution," Gandhi told reporters. "We want a clean, pure voters' list."
Gandhi and Congress have alleged that voters' lists in states where the party lost are corrupted, with voters' names deleted or included more than once to rig elections in favour of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party.
Opposition parties have also criticised the election panel's decision to revise the voters' list in the key northern state of Bihar just before state elections due later this year, saying it aims to disenfranchise large numbers of poor voters.
The BJP and the Election Commission have rejected the accusations.
He cited a survey in Karnataka that, according to him, revealed six key irregularities: multiple entries for the same voter, duplicate registrations across states, false addresses, clusters of bulk voters at single residences, unclear photographs on voter IDs and misuse of Form 6, which is used for enrolling first-time voters.
The politician also accused the poll body of crafting a "choreographed schedule" for state assembly elections in collusion with the BJP and claimed that the ECI refused to share digital versions of voter rolls.
The ECI responded strongly to the allegations, calling them an "absurd analysis" and urged the Congress leader to back his claims with a formal declaration under oath.
'State of bankruptcy'
The commission has said that changes in voters' lists are shared with political parties and all complaints are investigated thoroughly. It has also said that voters' lists need to be revised to remove dead voters or those who have relocated to other parts of the country, among others.
Congress and its allies have fared poorly in two state elections that they had expected to win after an impressive show in last year's parliamentary vote, which saw BJP losing its outright majority and remaining in power only with the help of regional parties.
Congress has also complained about electronic voting machines and said the counting process is not fair, charges rejected by the election panel.
The BJP said opposition parties were trying to create a "state of anarchy" by sowing seeds of doubt about the electoral process.
"They are in a state of bankruptcy because of their continuous losses," federal minister Dharmendra Pradhan told reporters on Monday.
-
South Korea’s ex-President Yoon issues public apology after being sentenced to life over martial law
-
Trump officially directs US agencies to identify and release files on extraterrestrial life
-
Who is 'Queen of Woke'? UK first female Civil head
-
Dwayne Johnson confesses what secretly scares him more than fame
-
Daniel Radcliffe wants son to see him as just dad, not Harry Potter
-
Nancy Guthrie kidnapped with 'blessings' of drug cartels
-
Heavy snowfall disrupts operations at Germany's largest Airport
-
France sees record 102mn international tourists in 2025