Akhilesh Yadav targeted the BJP government in Uttar Pradesh for the party leaders not being able to visit Sambhal
Akhilesh Yadav, a former chief minister of Uttar Pradesh and leader of the Samajwadi Party, attacked the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government in Uttar Pradesh on Saturday for preventing party leaders from visiting Sambhal, a violent area, and claimed that enforcing restrictions “is a failure” of administration.
He said that anyone who shouted offensive slogans and incited violence ought to have been subject to limitations.
“The BJP government’s management, governance, and administration have failed to implement limitations. Akhilesh Yadav wrote on X, “The atmosphere of harmony and peace in Sambhal would not have been ruined if the government had earlier restricted those who dreamed of causing riots and forced people to raise frantic slogans.”
Yadav said that Sambhal administrative officials should face harsh consequences.
“The whole Sambhal government, from top to bottom, should be suspended due to claims of carelessness, just as the BJP does when it removes the entire cabinet. Murder cases need to be brought…”The BJP has lost,” the former chief minister of Uttar Pradesh said.
Mata Prasad Pandey, the head of the Samajwadi Party, said on Saturday that he had received a phone call from the Sambhal area Magistrate requesting that he refrain from visiting the area.
Will there be any trouble if we go there? The Justice Commission and members of the media are heading there. In order to conceal all of its efforts, this administration is purposefully halting us,” Pandey, the state assembly’s leader of the opposition, told media.
On Friday, however, the Supreme Court ordered Uttar Pradesh to maintain “harmony and peace” in Sambhal and instructed the trial court there to hold off on pursuing the lawsuit against the Jama Masjid until the High Court listed the plea that the Masjid Committee had filed against the survey order.
The report of the lawyer commissioner who surveyed the mosque shall be preserved in a sealed cover and not unsealed in the interim, according to a bench consisting of Justice Sanjay Kumar and Chief Justice of India Sanjiv Khanna.
“We must preserve harmony and peace. Nothing is what we wish to happen. “We must maintain complete objectivity and make sure that nothing improper is done,” the bench said.
Since the local court ordered an inspection of the mosque on November 19, tensions had been building in Sambhal. Four individuals were killed in clashes between protesters and police over the court-ordered assessment of the Jama Masjid. The study was conducted in response to a petition filed in the local court asserting that the mosque’s location was formerly a Harihar temple.