Jitender
Singh Tomar
|
Police in India's capital on Tuesday
arrested New Delhi's law minister for falsely saying he had a law degree while
representing a political party with an anti-corruption platform.
The
arrest of Jitender Singh Tomar is the latest embarrassment for the Delhi state
government run by the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), or Common Man Party, which won
power in February, in one of the largest election victories in India's history.
"Our
investigation showed that the minister submitted a fake law degree in the
election affidavit and had also obtained a licence to practice as a
lawyer," said Deepak Mishra, special commissioner of New Delhi police.
Reuters report continues:
Telephone
calls to Tomar seeking comment went unanswered.
The
minister's qualifications became a topic of controversy after lawyers from the
Delhi Bar Council made a police complaint seeking to examine his college
degree.
AAP
supporters accused the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi of
orchestrating the arrest on trumped-up charges following clashes over the right
to appoint senior bureaucrats and police officials.
Party
leader Arvind Kejriwal has criticised Modi's efforts to make it easier for
businesses to buy farmland, a key issue in the large, mainly rural states where
the prime minister's Hindu nationalist party hopes to consolidate power by
winning local polls in the next two years.
Delhi's
deputy chief minister, Manish Sisodia, called Tuesday's arrest part of a wider
conspiracy hatched by the federal government to malign the state
administration.
"Is
he a terrorist, has he set off a bomb in Delhi to be arrested?" Sisodia
asked reporters. "Tomar has been arrested to deter the Delhi government
from acting against corruption."
Sisodia
did not address the false degree accusation, however.
Since
taking power, AAP has faced rebellions from founder members upset by Kejriwal's
governing style and has even struggled to clear the streets of garbage, as
workers went unpaid.
"Delhi
a chaotic disaster," Shekhar Gupta, a former editor of the Indian Express
newspaper, said in a Twitter message. "Suits Kejriwal, whose politics is
built on three pillars, victimhood, name-calling, revenge."
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