ARVIND Kejriwal, chief minister of Delhi’s capital territory and a key opposition leader, was remanded in custody yesterday until Thursday, a blow to the opposition after he was arrested in a graft case weeks before a general election.
The Enforcement Directorate (ED), India’s financial crime agency, arrested Kejriwal on Thursday in connection with corruption allegations relating to the city’s liquor policy.
His detention, less than a month before India begins voting on April 19, is a setback for his Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) and the larger opposition alliance as he is a key campaigner.
All the main leaders of his decade-old party are in jail in connection with the liquor case.
Kejriwal, 55, told the India Today TV channel he would not resign and would run the city government from jail if he had to.
“This is not a case or investigation, this is murder of democracy in this country,” said Delhi’s finance minister Atishi, who uses only one name.
“The BJP wants to win the elections through the ED,” she said, referring to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party.
AAP has called for protests, with plans for its members to burn effigies of Modi in Delhi tomorrow and march to his residence on Tuesday.
Earlier yesterday, AAP workers protested in Delhi and the states of Punjab, Haryana, Odisha and Gujarat, among others. Dozens were detained by police. Police in Punjab, the only other state AAP rules, and Haryana, used water cannons to disperse protesters.
A delegation of opposition leaders met the Election Commission of India asking it to intervene, saying the arrest had damaged the level playing field the opposition needs.
The ED is investigating allegations that the Delhi government’s 2022 policy that ended its control over liquor sales gave undue advantages to private retailers. It was subsequently withdrawn and the AAP government has said no evidence of wrongdoing has emerged in the investigation.