New Delhi: Member of Parliament Raghav Chadha He strongly refuted the accusations leveled against him by his party colleagues and warned: “kyonki mein ghayal hoon isliyey ghaatak hoon” (Because I am injured, I am dangerous), a famous dialogue used in the Bollywood film “Dhurandhar”.“I went to Parliament to make an impact, not to create a ruckus,” Chadha said. Refuting party leaders’ allegations that he is afraid to speak out against Prime Minister Narendra Modi and bjp And failing to raise issues consistent with his party’s stance, Chadha claimed the “false” allegations against him were part of a “planned campaign” and a “coordinated attack”.
Leaders from AAP reacted violently punjab province Slamming Chadha for ignoring the core issues of Punjab in the Assembly. The conflict began after the AAP on Thursday sacked Chadha as deputy leader of the party in the Lok Sabha. Chadha sparked a backlash from colleagues on Friday when he announced via video message that he would not be intimidated by attempts to silence him.“To those who have accused me today, I want to tell them that every lie will be exposed and every question will be answered,” Chadha said in a video message on Saturday.“To those who are accusing me today, I want to tell them that every lie will be exposed and every question will be answered – kyonki main ghayal hoon isliyey ghaatak hoon (I am dangerous because I am injured),” Chadha warned.Chadha said: “Since yesterday, there has been a planned campaign against me. The same language, the same wording, the same accusations. This is not a coincidence, it is an organized attack.”The MP dismissed the allegation that he did not join the opposition in striking over the issue, calling it a “blatant lie” and questioned that those accusing him could not even cite a single such instance, saying it could be proven through CCTV footage of the House proceedings.Chadha refuted allegations that he refused to sign the notice seeking the removal of Chief Election Commissioner Gyanesh Kumar and said no party leader asked him to sign the notice “formally or informally”. He added that out of 10 AAP MPs, around 6 or 7 had not signed it, so why was he being singled out and blamed. Chadha also stressed that to submit a notification, at least 50 members need to sign it and this number was achieved by the opposition parties in the Rajya sabha, so he wondered why AAP was making a big deal about him not signing the notification. Responding to AAP’s accusations that he raised unimportant questions out of fear, Chadha said: “I want to make it clear that I did not go to Parliament to shout, create ruckus, break the microphone or abuse people. I went to Parliament to raise the concerns of common people.” He went on to list the issues he raised, including consumption taxincome tax, water issues in Punjab, air quality in Delhi and unemployment and price rise.Meanwhile, Punjab Finance Minister Harpal Singh Cheema, AAP Punjab president Aman Arora and AAP Punjab chief spokesperson Kuldeep Singh Dhaliwal lashed out at Chadha, claiming that despite repeated communications, key issues including GST losses have not been resolved. Calling Chadha’s silence a betrayal of the people and mission of Punjab, leaders said the failure to arouse the concerns of farmers and the plight of flood victims reflected a complete disconnect with the actual situation.


