K Kavitha questions Modi’s silence on Adani US bribery indictment
Political opponents are arrested without evidence and put on trial for months while Mr Gautam Adani walks free despite repeated and grave allegations, she said.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday said no one has the right to violate law and order in the name of faith, in an apparent reference to the violence in Haryana.
India is the land of Gandhi Ji and Lord Buddha. Violence is not in our culture. No form of violence is acceptable. https://t.co/9OSIL4x0J3
— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) August 27, 2017
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“The entire country is in sorrow due to the violence. I want to make it clear that no one has the right to violate law and order in the name of faith,” the Prime Minister said, without categorically mentioning the Friday violence after the conviction of Dera Sacha Sauda sect chief Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh in a rape and sexual exploitation case.
“Whenever there is a news of violence, tensions are obvious,” said Modi in his address to the nation in his monthly radio programme “Maan Ki Baat”.
Thirty-six people have been killed in the violence so far.
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