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Tag: Rahul Gandhi

  • Photo of Indian opposition leader with controversial Indian preacher is manipulated

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    A manipulated image appearing to show India’s opposition Congress leader Rahul Gandhi sitting with controversial Islamic preacher Zakir Naik — a wanted man in India — has surfaced in social media posts alleging the pair met during Gandhi’s September vacation in Malaysia. The original photo shows Naik meeting religious officials in Oman in 2023.

    The image of Gandhi sitting next to Naik and another man was shared on Facebook on September 12, 2025.

    “Rahul Gandhi met anti-India terrorist Zakir Naik in Malaysia,” reads part of its Hindi-language caption.

    The post surfaced after Gandhi was targeted by members of India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) for taking a holiday in Malaysia’s Langkawi in the middle of campaigning for local elections in Bihar in early September (archived link).

    Screenshot of the false post captured September 20, 2025, with a red X added by AFP

    The purported image of Gandhi and Naik in Malaysia also surfaced elsewhere on Facebook and X.

    Naik, a radical television preacher who has called the 9/11 attacks an “inside job”, left India in 2016 and moved to largely Muslim Malaysia, where he was granted permanent residency (archived link).

    He is wanted in India for money laundering and terror-related activities, while his Islamic Research Foundation was declared “unlawful” and banned in the country (archived link).

    However, the circulating image has been digitally manipulated — it also bears a watermark reading “ChatGPT” in the bottom-right corner, suggesting it was edited using the AI tool.

    A Google reverse image search found the unaltered photo in a post on a Facebook page called Arabian Daily on March 23, 2023 (archived link).

    The post is captioned, “In pictures: Dr Zakir Naik Interactions with His Eminence Sheikh Ahmad Al Khalili, Grand Mufti of the Sultanate of Oman, Dr Mohammed Al Maamari Minister of Endowments and Religious Affairs, and Assistant Mufti Sheikh Kahlan Al Kharousi.”

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the image in the false post (left) and the photo of Naik with Omani religious officials (right)</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the image in the false post (left) and the photo of Naik with Omani religious officials (right)

    Arabic-language media outlet Watan also published the photo of Naik with the religious officials in March 23 in a report about the preacher arriving in Oman to deliver a series of lectures (archived link).

    Subsequent keyword searches found the image of Gandhi was likely cropped and mirrored from a video uploaded to the Congress politician’s YouTube channel on March 5, 2023 (archived link).

    <span>Screenshot of the image in the false post (left) and the YouTube video of Rahul Gandhi (right)</span>

    Screenshot of the image in the false post (left) and the YouTube video of Rahul Gandhi (right)

    The Congress leader was interacting with journalists during an event in London in March 2023.

    As of September 30, 2025, there have been no official reports Gandhi and Naik met in Malaysia.

    AFP has previously debunked misinformation around Rahul Gandhi here.

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  • Video shows crowd gathered for bullock cart race, not Indian opposition leader’s rally

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    As eastern India’s Bihar gears up for elections later this year, politicians across party lines have begun canvassing in the state, but footage of a massive crowd does not show a rally in support of opposition Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi as claimed in social media posts. The video was filmed weeks earlier at a bullock cart race in Maharashtra state. 

    “Watch the charisma of Rahul Gandhi. If the media has courage, let them show it on TV,” reads a Hindi-language Facebook post shared on August 19, 2025.

    The post also shares a 25-second clip showing a large crowd gathered in an open ground with a text overlay that reads, “Rahul Gandhi has earned this. The public has come to see Rahul Gandhi.”

    Screenshot of the false Facebook post captured on August 20, 2025, with a red X added by AFP

    The false claim surfaced after Gandhi launched a month-long “voter rights” rally in the key battleground state of Bihar on August 17 (archived link).

    His Congress party will challenge the state’s ruling coalition formed by the Janata Dal United party and the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party in an election expected later this year (archived here).

    The party also alleged the Election Commission of India (ECI) had embarked on a “mass disenfranchisement” exercise after it gave voters in the state just weeks to prove their citizenship, requiring documents that few possess in a registration revamp.

    The ECI has called Gandhi’s accusation “false and misleading”.

    The clip circulated with similar claims on Facebook, Instagram, X and Threads.

    Some users appeared to believe the video shows a crowd of Gandhi supporters.

    “Thanks to the public of Bihar for their excellent support to Rahul Gandhi,” one user commented.

    Another user wrote, “Hail Rahul Gandhi! He is the most popular leader today.”

    But the clip actually shows spectators gathered for an annual bullock cart race held in Maharashtra in western India.

    A Google reverse image search with keyframes from the falsely shared clip found a similar video on Instagram shared on June 28, 2025 (archived link).

    Its Marathi-language caption reads, “Pedgaon Hind Kesari ground 2025. Heartbeat of Millions — Mathur 1001”, with a text overlay reading, “look how the white Mathur (bull) walks”.

    Mathur 1001 is a cross-bred bull famous in the region for winning several races (archived link).

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the clip shared in the false posts (L) and the Instagram video</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the clip shared in the false posts (L) and the Instagram video

    Subsequent keyword searches found multiple videos of the race on YouTube and Instagram shared in June 2025 (archived here and here).

    Images of the venue on Google Maps also match the visuals in the false clip (archived link).

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared video (L) and image on Google Maps, with matching features highlighted by AFP</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared video (L) and image on Google Maps, with matching features highlighted by AFP

    AFP has previously debunked other false claims related to Rahul Gandhi.

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  • India’s opposition, written off as too weak, makes a stunning comeback to slow Modi’s juggernaut

    India’s opposition, written off as too weak, makes a stunning comeback to slow Modi’s juggernaut

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    NEW DELHI – India’s bruised and battered opposition was largely written off in the lead-up to the national election as too weak and fragmented to take on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his powerful Hindu nationalist governing party.

    It scored a stunning comeback, slowing the Modi juggernaut and pushing his Bharatiya Janata Party well below the majority mark. It’s unchartered territory for the populist prime minister, who needs the help of his allies to stay in power. That could significantly change his governance style after he enjoyed a commanding majority in Parliament for a decade.

    The election results released Wednesday also marked a revival for the main opposition Congress party and its allies, who defied predictions of decline and made deep inroads into governing party strongholds, resetting India’s political landscape. The opposition won a total of 232 seats out of 543, doubling its strength from the last election.

    “The opposition has proved to be tremendously resilient and shown courage of conviction. In many ways it has saved India’s democracy and shown Modi that he can be challenged — and even humbled by denting his image of electoral invincibility,” said journalist and political analyst Rasheed Kidwai.

    The unwieldy grouping of more than two dozen opposition parties, called INDIA, was formed last year. Beset with ideological differences and personality clashes, what glued them together was a shared perceived threat: what they call Modi’s tightening grip on India’s democratic institutions and Parliament, and his strident Hindu nationalism that has targeted the country’s minorities, particularly Muslims.

    The election battle is between “Narendra Modi and INDIA, his ideology and INDIA,” the alliance’s campaign face, Rahul Gandhi, said at an opposition meeting last year.

    Gandhi, heir to India’s Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, has long been mocked by Modi, his party and his supporters as a beneficiary of dynastic politics. Gandhi’s father, grandmother and great-grandfather were all prime ministers.

    Under his leadership, the Congress party was reduced to a paltry 52 seats in 2019 when Modi romped to victory in a landslide win. And last year he was expelled from Parliament due to a defamation case after Modi’s party accused him of mocking the prime minister’s surname. (He was later returned to his seat by India’s top court.)

    But ahead of the 2024 election, Gandhi went through a transformation — he embarked on two cross-country marches against what he called Modi’s politics of hate, re-energizing his party’s members and rehabilitating his image.

    During the election campaign, he, along with other opposition leaders, sought to galvanize voters on issues such as high unemployment, growing inequality and economic and social injustice, while targeting Modi over his polarizing campaign and anti-Muslim rhetoric.

    “They certainly gained significant momentum through the course of the campaign, to the point where the opposition agendas became the agenda points of this election,” said Yamini Aiyar, a public policy scholar.

    The election results showed his messaging worked with the voters, as his party made substantial gains in BJP-governed states such as Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana and Maharashtra by tapping into economic stress. It won 99 seats across India.

    “Rahul Gandhi has emerged as a strong national leader and that should worry Modi,” Kidwai said.

    The opposition proved even more successful in a Modi party bastion where it flipped the largest number of seats: Uttar Pradesh, which sends the most lawmakers of any state — 80 — to Parliament.

    Long considered the biggest prize in Indian elections, the opposition clinched a staggering 44 parliamentary seats in the state, with the regional Samajwadi Party winning a whopping 37, leaving Modi’s party with less than half of the seats. In the 2019 election, the BJP won 62 seats in the state.

    The opposition also managed to wrest away BJP’s seat in Ayodhya city, a deeply symbolic loss for Modi’s party after the prime minister opened a controversial grand Hindu temple on the site of a razed mosque there in January. The opening of the temple dedicated to Lord Ram, at which Modi performed rituals, marked the unofficial start of his election campaign, with his party hoping it would resonate with the Hindu majority and bring more voters into its fold.

    “The BJP lost because its leadership did not have its ears to the ground. They believed that the issue of the Ram Temple would secure their victory, but they overlooked important issues like jobs and inflation,” said political analyst Amarnath Agarwal.

    A strong showing by the Trinamool Congress in West Bengal and the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam party in Tamil Nadu further boosted the opposition’s numbers, denying Modi the supermajority he hoped for after exhibiting confidence his alliance would take 400 seats.

    It also meant that the regional parties, once relegated to the margins after Modi’s dominating wins in 2014 and 2019, will acquire a greater political space in Indian politics.

    “It also gives a lot of power back to the states,” said Milan Vaishnav, director of the South Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “We’ve seen a lot of centralization in the hands of the executive, in the hands of the Prime Minister’s Office specifically.”

    The opposition’s surprise gains came against the backdrop of what it calls Modi’s intensified political crackdown against them.

    Modi and his government have increasingly wielded strong-arm tactics to subdue political opponents. In the run-up to the election, opposition leaders and parties faced a slew of legal and financial challenges. The chief ministers of two opposition-controlled states were thrown in jail and the bank accounts of the Congress party were temporarily frozen.

    Aiyar, the public policy scholar, said the opposition was able to “palpably catch on to signs of discontentment” even as it faced “fairly significant constraints of their own.”

    “This was certainly not a level playing field at the start of the election,” she said.

    As election results showed the opposition doing better than expected on Tuesday, a beaming Gandhi pulled out a red-jacketed copy of India’s Constitution that he had displayed on the campaign trail and said his alliance’s performance was the “first step in its fight” to save the charter.

    “India’s poorest stood up to save the Constitution,” he said.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Biswajeet Banerjee in Lucknow, India, contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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    Sheikh Saaliq And Krutika Pathi, Associated Press

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  • India’s Rahul Gandhi accuses PM Modi of favoring Adani Group

    India’s Rahul Gandhi accuses PM Modi of favoring Adani Group

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    NEW DELHI (AP) — India’s top opposition leader Rahul Gandhi on Saturday launched a scathing attack on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and said he was being targeted because he has raised serious questions about Modi’s relationship with the Indian business conglomerate Adani Group.

    Gandhi said the objective of his expulsion from Parliament on Friday was to prevent him from speaking in the legislature about his allegation of an infusion of an unaccounted $3 billion into shell companies owned by the Adani Group, headed by Gautam Adani.

    ”Some of these defense companies are working in drone and missile development and ordnance production. Why is the defense ministry not asking questions,” he said.

    Gandhi was expelled from Parliament a day after a court convicted him of defamation and sentenced him to two years in prison for mocking the surname Modi in an election speech.

    The actions against Gandhi, the great-grandson of India’s first prime minister, were widely condemned by opponents of Modi as the latest assaults against democracy and free speech by a ruling government seeking to crush dissent. Removing Gandhi from politics delivered a major blow to the opposition party he led ahead of next year’s national elections.

    Gandhi said he was not bothered about losing his seat in Parliament. “My job is to defend the institutions of the country and the voice of people,” he added.

    A court in the western Indian city of Surat also sentenced him to two years in prison on Thursday. But he won’t go to jail immediately as the court granted bail for 30 days to file an appeal against the verdict.

    The court convicted Gandhi for a 2019 speech in which he asked, “Why do all thieves have Modi as their surname?” Gandhi then referred to three well-known and unrelated Modis in the speech: a fugitive Indian diamond tycoon, a cricket executive banned from the Indian Premier League tournament and the prime minister.

    On Saturday, Gandhi didn’t indicate how soon his legal team will approach an appeals court seeking to overturn his conviction so he could save his seat in Parliament.

    He accused Modi of helping the Adani Group to get contracts in India, Sri Lanka, and Australia.

    He also alleged that a Chinese national was involved in investments in Adani’s shell companies. “Why nobody is asking the question who this Chinese national is,” he said. ”Nobody knows where this money has come from. Adani couldn’t generate this money.”

    Gandhi has demanded a parliamentary committee probe following a report by Hindenburg Research, the U.S. financial research firm, accusing the Adani Group of stock price manipulation and fraud running into billions of dollars. The Adani Group has denied any wrongdoing and the Modi government has not accepted a call for a parliamentary investigation.

    Soon after Gandhi’s news conference, Ravi Shankar Prasad, a top leader of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, rejected Gandhi’s accusations and said his disqualification from Parliament had nothing to do with the Adani Group controversy.

    Since Modi became prime minister in 2014, Adani’s net worth has shot up nearly 2,000% to $125 billion, according to Bloomberg’s Billionaire Index. He surpassed Amazon boss Jeff Bezos to briefly become the world’s second richest man in September after a surge in the value of his seven listed entities.

    Adani’s businesses have won multibillion-dollar contracts to build ports, highways and power plants. The industrialist’s ambitions include developing drones and ammunition, key to the government’s goal of boosting military-related exports to $5 billion while slashing costs for expensive imports.

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  • ‘I am not scared’: Disqualified Gandhi will continue questioning Modi | CNN

    ‘I am not scared’: Disqualified Gandhi will continue questioning Modi | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Indian opposition leader Rahul Gandhi said on Saturday he had been disqualified from parliament because he has been asking Prime Minister Narendra Modi tough questions about his relationship with Gautam Adani, founder of the Adani conglomerate.

    Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party responded saying Gandhi had been punished under the law for a defamatory comment he made in 2019 and it had nothing to do with the Adani issue.

    Gandhi, a former president of India’s main opposition Congress party who is still its main leader, lost his parliamentary seat on Friday, a day after a court in the western state of Gujarat convicted him in a defamation case and sentenced him to two years in jail.

    The court granted him bail and suspended his jail sentence for 30 days, allowing him to appeal.

    The defamation case was filed in connection with comments Gandhi made in a speech that many deemed insulting to Modi. Gandhi’s party and its allies have criticized the court ruling as politically motivated.

    “I have been disqualified because the prime minister is scared of my next speech, he is scared of the next speech that is going to come on Adani,” Gandhi told a news conference at the Congress party headquarters in New Delhi.

    “They don’t want that speech to be in parliament, that’s the issue,” Gandhi said in his first public comments since the conviction and disqualification.

    Gandhi, 52, the scion of a dynasty that has given India three prime ministers, did not elaborate on why Modi might not like his next speech.

    Gandhi’s once-dominant Congress controls less than 10% of the elected seats in parliament’s lower house and has been decimated by the BJP in two successive general elections, most recently in 2019.

    India’s next general election is due by mid-2024 and Gandhi has recently been trying to revive the party’s fortunes.

    “I am not scared of this disqualification … I will continue to ask the question, ‘what is the prime minister’s relationship with Mr Adani?’,” Gandhi said on Saturday.

    Modi’s rivals say the prime minister and the BJP have longstanding ties with the Adani group, going back nearly two decades when Modi was chief minister of the western state of Gujarat. Gautam Adani is also from Gujarat.

    The Congress party has questioned investments made by state-run firms in Adani companies and the handover of the management of six airports to the group in recent years, even though it had no experience in the sector.

    The Adani group has denied receiving any special favors from the government and government ministers have dismissed such opposition suggestions as “wild allegations”, saying regulators would look into any wrongdoing.

    Congress, and its opposition allies have called for a parliamentary investigation.

    “The life of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is an open book of honesty,” BJP leader Ravi Shankar Prasad told a news conference called in response to Gandhi’s statements on Saturday.

    “We don’t have to defend Adani, BJP never defends Adani, but BJP doesn’t target anyone either,” Prasad said, accusing Gandhi of habitually lying.

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  • India Expels Rahul Gandhi, Modi Critic, From Parliament

    India Expels Rahul Gandhi, Modi Critic, From Parliament

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    NEW DELHI (AP) — India’s top opposition leader and fierce critic of Prime Minister Narendra Modi was expelled from Parliament Friday, a day after a court convicted him of defamation and sentenced him to two years in prison for mocking the surname Modi in an election speech.

    The actions against Rahul Gandhi, the great-grandson of India’s first prime minister, were widely condemned by opponents of Modi as the latest assaults against democracy and free speech by a ruling government seeking to crush dissent. Removing Gandhi from politics delivered a major blow to the opposition party he led ahead of next year’s national elections.

    A local court from Modi’s home state of Gujarat convicted Gandhi on Thursday for a 2019 speech in which he asked, “Why do all thieves have Modi as their surname?” Gandhi then referred to three well-known and unrelated Modis in the speech: a fugitive Indian diamond tycoon, a cricket executive banned from the Indian Premier League tournament and the prime minister.

    Under Indian law, a criminal conviction and prison sentence of two years or more are grounds for expulsion from Parliament, but Gandhi is out on bail for 30 days and plans to appeal.

    Opposition lawmakers rallied to his defense on Friday, calling his expulsion a new low for India’s constitutional democracy.

    Modi’s critics say India’s democracy — the world’s largest with nearly 1.4 billion people — has been in retreat since he first came to power in 2014. They accuse his populist government of preoccupying itself with pursuing a Hindu nationalist agenda, a charge his administration has denied.

    “I am fighting for the voice of this country. I am ready to pay any price,” Gandhi, 52, wrote on Twitter.

    Gandhi’s family, starting with his great-grandfather, Jawaharlal Nehru, has produced three prime ministers. Two of them — his grandmother Indira Gandhi and father, Rajiv Gandhi — were assassinated in office.

    Gandhi has projected himself as the main challenger to the Modi government, but his Indian National Congress party has fared poorly during the last two general elections. He has been trying to woo voters in recent months by raising issues of corruption and accusing the Modi government of tarnishing India’s reputation for democracy.

    Late last year Gandhi led a popular “unity march” across wide swaths of India, rallying crowds against the Modi government and the Hindu nationalism that has surged under his leadership.

    Opponents blame Modi’s political party for rising hate speech and violence against Muslims and other minorities in recent years. Modi’s power has coincided with increasing assaults on the press and free speech, the jailing of activists and a crackdown on dissent.

    Modi’s party has denied the accusations and his supporters say the tea seller’s son from Gujarat state has improved the nation’s standing.

    Gandhi has also attacked the government over Modi’s proximity to business tycoon Gautam Adani, who in January was accused by an American research and investment firm betting against his company of engaging in fraud and stock-price manipulation. Before his expulsion, Gandhi had called for an investigation into Adani’s businesses, whose market value has plummeted by tens of billions of dollars. Modi’s party say he has no links with Adani.

    If Gandhi’s conviction is not suspended or overturned by a higher court, he faces the risk of not being able to contest national elections in 2024, although some analysts say an eventual return to politics is possible.

    “This could actually also provide an impetus for the opposition to finally sink their differences and come together in a united fight against Modi,” said Arti Jerath, a political commentator.

    Gandhi’s political party said the conviction, which they plan to appeal, was “cowardly and dictatorial” and leaders warned that his expulsion could do long-term damage to the country.

    “This is politics with the gloves off and it bodes ill for our democracy,” said Shashi Tharoor, a lawmaker from Gandhi’s party.

    NEW DELHI, INDIA – FEBRUARY 25: Prime Minister Narendra Modi during their joint press statement at the Hyderabad House, on February 25, 2023 in New Delhi, India. Olaf Scholz arrived in New Delhi for a two-day visit, accompanied by senior officials and a high-powered business delegation. (Photo by Sanjeev Verma/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)

    Hindustan Times via Getty Images

    Modi’s critics point to his party’s attacks against opposition leaders, rights groups and media outlets critical of the government.

    Last month India’s tax officials raided BBC offices in New Delhi and Mumbai weeks after it aired a documentary critical of Modi. The documentary examined his role in 2002 anti-Muslim riots in the western state of Gujarat, where he was chief minister at the time. More than 1,000 people were killed in the violence.

    Modi has denied allegations that authorities under his watch allowed and even encouraged the bloodshed, and the Supreme Court said it found no evidence to prosecute him.

    Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay, a political analyst, said the ruling party had become increasingly angered by Gandhi’s corruption accusations and that his line of attack against the Adani Group was “proving too much for the governing party.”

    Gandhi’s expulsion also came after fourteen political parties filed a petition to India’s top court alleging that Modi’s government was engaged in politically motivated financial-crime investigations of opposition leaders. The Supreme Court said it will take up the petition in the first week of April.

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  • Swara Bhasker Reception: Rahul Gandhi, Arvind Kejriwal, Jaya Bachchan arrive to bless the newly weds

    Swara Bhasker Reception: Rahul Gandhi, Arvind Kejriwal, Jaya Bachchan arrive to bless the newly weds

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    Swara Bhasker and Fahad Zirar Ahmad’s wedding reception is happening right now in Delhi. The actress’ home is in the capital. Also, Fahad Ahmad has close ties to Delhi. The actress wore a hot pink lehenga for her nuptials. The couple walked in hand-in-hand looking absolutely radiant in love. Arvind Kejriwal and Rahul Gandhi are the top politicians at their wedding reception. Her father Commodore Chitrapu Uday Bhasker told a paper that her bidaai will happen tomorrow. He said he will be a very emotional man. Also Read – Swara Bhasker wedding: New bride of B’town shares pictures from her Mehendi and Sangeet ceremony with Fahad Ahmad

    Rahul Gandhi was all smiles as he posed with the couple. Swara Bhasker and Fahad Ahmad met when they were protesting on the CAA issue. They met via activism and slowly became friends. He is the youth secretary of the Samajwadi Party in Mumbai. Take a look at the proceedings… Also Read – Swara Bhasker, Fahad Ahmad Haldi celebrations turn into Holi on the beats of Aaj Braj Main [Watch Video]

    Shashi Tharoor who is a member of the Congress also arrived. He was dressed in a mustard kurta with a black bandhgala. Arvind Kejriwal also graced the event. He is seen with her father Commodore Chitrapu Uday Bhasker who is an expert in defence matters. Also Read – Kareena Kapoor Khan, Sonam Kapoor, Swara Bhaskar, Shikha Talsania to reunite for Veere Di Wedding 2?

    Samajwadi party leader Akhilesh Yadav was also there for the pre-wedding event of the couple. Swara Bhasker and Fahad Ahmad have been trolled mercilessly. They also had a pre-wedding evening where we saw her in a sharara. Swara Bhasker looked radiant. They also married as per Telugu traditions. Multi-cultural marriages in India have come under the scanner but these two made love win!
     

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  • Watch! Rahul Gandhi gives flying kiss to crowd chanting ‘Modi, Modi’ during Bharat Jodo Yatra

    Watch! Rahul Gandhi gives flying kiss to crowd chanting ‘Modi, Modi’ during Bharat Jodo Yatra

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    Currently leading the Bharat Jodo Yatra through Rajasthan, Congress MP Rahul Gandhi gave flying kiss to a crowd chanting ‘Modi, Modi’ slogans during the yatra. In the video, Rahul can be first seen waving at a crowd as chants praising Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the yatra passed through Agar Malwa district on Sunday.

    Rahul Gandhi, who was been leading the foot march from Kanyakumari to Kashmir, urged his fellow Yatris to wave back to the crowd and gave a flying kiss to those raising the slogans.

    The Bharat Jodo Yatra in the Congress-ruled Rajasthan was started on Monday morning. The yatra commenced from Kali Talai in Jhalrapatan in Jhalawar and was joined by Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot, PCC chief Govind Singh Dotasra, former deputy chief minister Sachin Pilot, ministers and other MLAs.

    Tight security arrangements have been made for the yatra by the police authorities.

    The yatra covered around 14 km and reached Baliborda chauraha at around 10 am. The yatra restarted after the lunch break from Nahardi at 3.30 pm. The yatra will take a break in Jhalawar for a night stay.

    Rajasthan CM Ashok Gehlot has accused the media of not covering the Yatra after Gandhi entered the Rajasthan. He said that media is “boycotting” the Bharat Jodo Yatra, and that BJP might be worried because of Gandhi’s initiative to connect with the masses.

    Gehlot mentioned social media as the fourth pillar state and to those blocking the coverage, he said that the country won’t forgive.

    Rahul Gandhi’s Rajasthan visit comes after Gehlot called Sachin Pilot “gaddar (traitor)” in an interview with a news channel. However, the party had put up a show of unity on Sunday as both Gehlot and Pilot welcomed Gandhi.

    The Bharat Jodo Yatra has already covered 2,500 km across seven states. As per Jairam Ramesh, nearly 1,200 km of the foot march is still left, which will be covered over the next few weeks.
     

    Also read: Bharat Jodo Yatra: Boy gifts piggy bank to Rahul Gandhi in Madhya Pradesh

    Also read: ‘I feel dogs have a higher value in Congress party than humans’: Himanta hits back at Kharge

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  • Bharat Jodo Yatra: Boy gifts piggy bank to Rahul Gandhi in Madhya Pradesh

    Bharat Jodo Yatra: Boy gifts piggy bank to Rahul Gandhi in Madhya Pradesh

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    Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Sunday took to Twitter to share a video of a boy giving him his piggy bank during the Bharat Jodo Yatra in Madhya Pradesh. “Sacrifice and selflessness are values inculcated during childhood,” he said, adding, that the piggy bank is “invaluable” to him.

    In the video, the boy identified as Yashraj Parmar, is seen walking with him and can be heard saying he likes Rahul Gandhi because he takes everyone along. The boy also says that the piggy bank can be used during the yatra, if required. “I saved the money from my pocket money only,” he said.

    “According to my understanding of this yatra, it is to end the animosity between Hindu-Muslim and bring everyone together,” the boy stated.

    Meanwhile, recently Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) IT cell head Amit Malviya had posted a video of the yatra in which Rahul Gandhi, party general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra and Madhya Pradesh Congress president Kamal Nath are seen walking and a voice purportedly shouting “Pakistan Zindabad” is heard.

    “After Richa Chaddha’s public application to join Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat “Jodo” Yatra, “Pakistan Zindabad” (listen towards the end of the video) slogans raised in Khargon,” he said. “This is Congress’ truth,” he added.

    After Richa Chaddha’s public application to join Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat “Jodo” Yatra, “Pakistan Zindabad” (listen towards the end of the video) slogans raised in Khargon.

    Amidst this, senior Congress leader Digvijaya Singh on Sunday demanded that the man who made the “doctored” video of the slogan-shouting be identified and arrested.

    Also Read: Rahul Gandhi performs aarti at Narmada ghat; Smriti Irani takes a dig at Congress leader

     

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  • Rahul Gandhi performs aarti at Narmada ghat; Smriti Irani takes a dig at Congress leader

    Rahul Gandhi performs aarti at Narmada ghat; Smriti Irani takes a dig at Congress leader

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    Union minister for Women and Child Development Smriti Irani on Friday took a potshot at Congress leader Rahul Gandhi and posted his upside-down picture on Twitter while performing aarti at Narmada Ghat in Khargone, Madhya Pradesh. Rahul Gandhi and his sister Priyanka Gandhi Vadra were in Madhya Pradesh’s Khandwa district on Friday where they performed ‘aarti’ at the Bramhapuri Ghat. They also offered prayers at the famous Omkareshwar Temple on a hillock by the river that houses one of the 12 ‘jyotirlingas’. 

    Irani, who is in Surat to address the party’s women wing workers as part of the campaign for the Gujarat Assembly elections, tweeted Gandhi’s picture where he can be seen wearing an uttariya, a religious scarf, with Om written on it in an upside-down manner.   

    Earlier in the day, the union minister targeted Congress leader Rahul Gandhi over alleged shouting of the slogan `Pakistan Zindabad’ during his ongoing Bharat Jodo Yatra. Gandhi blamed the BJP for tampering with a video of the Yatra in which someone is purportedly heard shouting the slogan `Pakistan Zindabad’.  

    Irani said: “Pakistan Zindabad slogans were shouted during Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra. This is not the first time someone has insulted India during the former Congress president’s Yatra. I want to ask Rahul Gandhi how many more such persons you will take along in your caravan?”  

    Irani vs Gandhi 

    Irani has time to time criticised Rahul Gandhi’s leadership and policies. Earlier this month while addressing a rally in Himachal Pradesh, Irani said ever since she dispatched Rahul Gandhi from Amethi, he has been running around the country trying to connect the country. 

    In the 2019 General Elections, Irani defeated Gandhi in Amethi, a Congress stronghold for decades. She won by over 55,000 votes – delivering a massive shock to the Congress as the party had never lost from Amethi. During her recent visit to Amethi in November, the union minister said: “The people blessed Rahul Gandhi and the Gandhi family by electing them as public representatives from Amethi (previously). But, they gave nothing to the people except deceit and just one glimpse in five years,” she said.

    Bharat Jodo Yatra 

    Congress’s Bharat Jodo Yatra is an ongoing mass movement where Rahul Gandhi is trying to mobilise the party cadre and the general public. The Yatra is from Kanyakumari (the southern tip of the peninsula) to the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir (JK). It will cover a distance of 3,570 kilometres over 150 days. 

    Priyanka Gandhi had for the first time joined the Yatra this week. Her family also joined her for the aarti at the Narmada river.

     

       

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  • Govt cancels Foreign Contribution Regulation Act licence of Rajiv Gandhi Foundation

    Govt cancels Foreign Contribution Regulation Act licence of Rajiv Gandhi Foundation

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    The Centre has cancelled the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) licence of the Rajiv Gandhi Foundation (RGF), a non-government organisation associated with the Gandhi family, for alleged violations of the law, officials said. The decision was made after an inter-ministerial committee set up by the ministry of home affairs (MHA) in July 2020 conducted investigations. 

    The license was cancelled as the Gandhi family-affiliated non-governmental organisation allegedly violated the foreign funding law. 

    “Yes, the FCRA licence of the Rajiv Gandhi Foundation has been cancelled after an investigation against it, an official said. 

    The institution was set up in 1991. RGF is known for its work in a number of critical issues such as health, science and technology, women and children, disability support in a span of more than 20 years. It also worked in the education sector, as per its website. 

    Former Congress president and Rajiv Gandhi’s wife Sonia Gandhi is the chairperson of RGF. Other trustees include former prime minister Manmohan Singh, former finance minister P Chidambaram, Congress MP Rahul Gandhi and Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra. 

    The MHA had reportedly set up an inter-ministerial committee headed by an Enforcement Directorate (ED) officer to investigate three Gandhi family foundations — Rajiv Gandhi Foundation (RGF), Rajiv Gandhi Charitable Trust (RGCT) and Indira Gandhi Memorial Trust — for possible violations of the money laundering act, Income Tax act and FCRA. 

    The committee reportedly investigated whether these trusts run by the Gandhi family and other Congress leaders manipulated any documents while filing income tax or misused and laundered money received from foreign countries. 

    In June 2020, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) chief JP Nadda had said the People’s Republic of China gave funds to RGF between 2005 and 2009 to carry out studies that were not in national interest. Since then, RGF’s activities have been under scanner.  

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  • “Ask Kharge-ji”: Did Rahul Gandhi declare Mallikarjun Kharge as Congress President before poll results?

    “Ask Kharge-ji”: Did Rahul Gandhi declare Mallikarjun Kharge as Congress President before poll results?

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    Rahul Gandhi, who is leading ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra,’ said that the new Congress President, Kharge ji (referring to Mallikarjun Kharge) and Sonia ji (interim chief Sonia Gandhi) will decide what role he gets to play in the party. Rahul was speaking to reporters around 1.30 pm in Andhra Pradesh. His remarks came way before the results got out as the counting for Congress president was still ongoing that time and results were declared post 2 pm.

    Rahul Gandhi during the press conference said, “The new president will decide what my role will be, ask Kharge ji and Sonia ji.” His statement added that the final authority in the Congress party is the Congress president and he will decide exactly how the party moves forward.

    Mallikarjun Kharge won the party’s presidential polls, and became the first non-Gandhi person to be elected as party president in over two decades. He defeated party presidential candidate Shashi Tharoor by over 6,000 votes. Tharoor congratulated the new party president although earlier in the day, Tharoor’s polling agent Salman Soz reportedly wrote to Congress central election authority chairman Madhusudan Mistry and asked, “that all votes from UP be deemed invalid.”  

    Rahul Gandhi also took to Twitter and congratulated Mallikarjun Kharge on being elected as the new party President and said that Kharge’s experience and ideological commitment will serve the party well as he takes on this historic responsibility.

     “Congratulations to Mallikarjun Kharge ji on being elected as the President of @INCIndia. The Congress President represents a democratic vision of India. His vast experience and ideological commitment will serve the party well as he takes on this historic responsibility,” his tweet read.

    Congress’s ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ will enter Telangana on October 31 and will tour the state until November 7. The yatra will enter Hyderabad on November 1 through Shamshabad.

    Also read: Congress president elections: Counting of votes to take place at 10 am; Mallikarjun Kharge, Shashi Tharoor in fray

    Also read: Congress President Poll Results: Mallikarjun Kharge defeats Shashi Tharoor by over 6,000 votes

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  • How the Gandhis went from ‘Kennedys of India’ to the political wilderness | CNN

    How the Gandhis went from ‘Kennedys of India’ to the political wilderness | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    He has about 2,500 kilometers to go until his journey is complete. But the great-grandson of India’s first prime minister appears determined.

    Dressed head-to-toe in white, Rahul Gandhi is walking 3,500 kilometers (2,175 miles) across India to meet voters and revive interest in the Indian National Congress, a once powerful political party now struggling to win votes.

    Each leg is documented on live feeds and social media, but Gandhi is no longer the party leader – and won’t be taking his followers to the next national election in 2024.

    That will be down to Mallikarjun Kharge, a Congress veteran, who was appointed to the top role on Wednesday, in a move that means for the first time in more than 20 years the party will be led by someone other than a Gandhi.

    That a Gandhi is not going to be the face of India’s oldest political unit is almost unthinkable to many – a member of the family has been in charge of it for 40 out of its 75 years of independence, and involved in the leadership for much of the other 35 years.

    But analysts say as the country shifts into a new era, riding on a wave of right-wing, nationalist politics, the family and the Congress has little significance in the country’s political present, driven in part by numerous corruption scandals and mismanagement within the party.

    “The Gandhis today are completely dwarfed and overshadowed by Narendra Modi,” said New Delhi-based political commentator Arati R. Jerath.

    “It’s hard to predict the future, but for a family that ruled much of independent India, it is unlikely we will see a Gandhi leader of the country again.”

    As a powerful political dynasty, some have likened the Gandhis to the Kennedys, having for decades carefully navigated a series of personal tragedies alongside a tough power balancing act.

    The family doesn’t take its name from Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the country’s famed independence leader.

    Instead, they are the descendants of Jawaharlal Nehru, who was instrumental in the country’s independence movement from British rule and in 1947 became its first prime minister. Nehru’s daughter Indira adopted the Gandhi name through her marriage to Feroze Gandhi, another party member unrelated to its leader.

    Indira would later succeed her father, before handing the leadership to her son, Rajiv. Later, his wife, Sonia Gandhi, and son, Rahul, would take over.

    Nehru ruled for 17 years after independence from British rule, ushering India into a new era after its bloody partition, that led to the creation of Pakistan, caused the deaths of 2 million people and uprooted an estimated 15 million more.

    Nehru united the impoverished nation by planting the seeds for decades of economic, social and political development.

    “He was part of the freedom struggle, and so he wanted to ensure that India reach her potential and grow,” Jerath said. “He wanted to lead his people into a brave new world.”

    Throughout his time in power Nehru promoted democracy and secularism, invested in science and technology, built leading educational institutes, and promoted gender equality in the deeply patriarchal country.

    When he died while in office on May 28, 1964, tributes poured in from all over the world. Two years later, his daughter, Indira Gandhi (who adopted her husband’s last name), would fill his shoes as the country’s first – and so far only – female prime minister.

    Groomed for the position from an early age, Indira Gandhi was considered an astute, strong-willed, and to some, autocratic leader.

    Former Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi at Delhi's historic Red Fort.

    She was elected prime minister from 1966 to 1977, and again in 1980. But her years in office were marked with both personal tragedy – her son Sanjay died shortly into her second stint – and turbulence, owing, in part, to a war with Pakistan, droughts, famine and an economic crisis.

    Faced with growing discontent, Indira Gandhi proclaimed a controversial state of emergency in India for 21 months in 1975 – suspending basic liberties, imposing press censorship and imprisoning opposition members.

    Her years in power came to a tragic climax when, on October 31, 1984, she was shot dead at her home in New Delhi by her Sikh bodyguards, four months after she ordered Indian troops to storm the Golden Temple – one of Sikhism’s holiest shrines – to flush out separatists.

    “The mood of the nation changed following the assassination,” said Rasheed Kidwai, author of “Sonia, A Biography” and visiting Fellow with the Observer Research Foundation. “But the tragic part of it is, it has a law of diminishing returns. These days, not a lot of our young children know of the sacrifices and tough decisions that were made by her.”

    Indira Gandhi’s son, Rajiv, took over from her after her death.

    Rajiv Gandhi and his Italian-born wife, Sonia, during a campaign trip.

    Known as the “unwilling” prime minister who never wanted the job, Rajiv Gandhi became the youngest leader at the age of 40. But he served less than a decade, losing the 1989 general election following a corruption scandal, and was assassinated two years later by the Sri Lankan separatist group, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

    During his tenure, he signed peace accords with insurgent groups in states where religious tensions were high, and is credited for developing India’s science and technology sectors, giving him the moniker “Father of Information and Technology.”

    With no Gandhi at the helm, and the emergence of the BJP in the 1990s, the Congress struggled. In the years that followed, India’s leadership swung between parties.

    It wasn’t until Rajiv’s Italian-born widow, Sonia, took over as leader of the Congress in 1998 that they made a political comeback.

    Six years later, she led the party to victory in the general election – but stopped short of taking the top position and instead appointed economist Manmohan Singh as prime minister.

    But with the ascendance of a new wave of right-wing politics, their party now lurks in the political wilderness, analysts say. In 2014, Modi was elected prime minister with a roaring majority.

    “(The Gandhis) exude the tragic glamor of the Kennedys,” said Jerath, the political commentator. “This was a family that built India’s education, health care and technology institutions. Their legacy is still felt today.”

    On July 3, 2019, following a humiliating and crushing defeat in the Indian general election, Rahul Gandhi publicly resigned as leader of the Congress.

    Modi’s BJP had just won a historic majority in the lower house of parliament, cementing the antithesis to Gandhi’s Congress as the most formidable political force in Indian politics in decades.

    “Modi has perfected the narrative that the Gandhis are the liberal elite, the dynasty that shouldn’t be in power,” said Kidwai, the author. “And as the country shifts towards the right, his politics are proving tremendously popular.”

    The BJP has its roots in Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a right wing-Hindu group that are adherents of Hindutva ideology – to make India the land of the Hindus.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi gives a victory speech after winning India's general election, in New Delhi on May 23, 2019.

    Nearly 80% of the country’s 1.3 billion people are Hindus, and analysts say Modi’s populist politics appeal to the masses.

    “India is changing. As democracy has deepened, we have seen the rise of a new class of people – and this class really is not schooled in the Nehruvian principles of democracy,” Jerath said. “They are willing to buy into Hindutva politics of the Modi-led BJP. And this is something that this generation of the Gandhis have not been able to counter.”

    Moreover, analysts point to decades of infighting and mismanagement within the Congress party, that have weakened its position in the country. Rahul and Sonia Gandhi have also been accused of corruption – allegations they deny.

    The second term of the last Congress prime minister to govern India was riddled with allegations of corruption and bribery scandals running into tens of millions of dollars.

    Modi’s humble beginnings as the son of a tea seller, versus the Gandhis’ privileged and Western-influenced upbringing, also makes him more relatable to an emerging middle-class population, Jerath said. Nehru, like Rajiv and Rahul, was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge. His daughter, Indira, at Oxford University.

    “Rahul Gandhi kept looking for success but it was rather elusive,” Kidwai said. “That’s why he’s taken on a different role and gone on this campaign across the country.”

    As Rahul Gandhi continues on his journey to unite the country, he may succeed in rebuilding the image of the Congress. But it seems unlikely he will ever become prime minister of the country, like his father, grandmother and great-grandfather before him. He never married and has no children. His sister, Priyanka, also a member of the party, has two young children – but it is unclear if they will ever foray into political life.

    All eyes will be on the next leader, as he attempts to get enough votes to unseat Modi in 2024.

    “Modi certainly has a grip on power,” Jerath said. “But if the Congress can get their act together, then we may just see a comeback.”

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