"Will prove very costly": AAP accuses JP Nadda of calling UP, Bihar people "Rohingya, Bangladeshi"

Dec 18, 2024

New Delhi [India], December 18 : Aam Aadmi Party lashed out at Bharatiya Janata Party National President and Union Minister JP Nadda accusing him of calling people of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar 'Rohingyas'.
Reiterating the party's allegation that the names of many voters are being 'cut' from the voter list, the Rajya Sabha MP said he will raise his voice if the names of people from Purvanchal are removed.
Speaking to ANI, Sanjay Singh said, "If you will call the people of UP and Bihar as Rohingyas, who have been living here for 40-50 years if you want to remove their names from the voter list, then would I not raise my voice? Will we tolerate it if the BJP National President calls them Bangladeshi and Rohingya? We will fight against those who will insult the people of UP, Bihar and Purvanchal."
Earlier, JP Nadda in Rajya Sabha refuted AAP's allegations and said that the requests made by BJP over the deletion of names are to find out the presence of "Rohingyas, Bangladeshis and infiltrators" and to check if AAP is in power only with their votes.
AAP National Convenor Arvind Kejriwal also slammed Nadda and said that the BJP President's remarks will prove "very costly" to the party in the upcoming Delhi assembly polls.
In a post on X, he said, "BJP President Nadda ji calling the Purvanchal brothers Rohingya, Bangladeshi and infiltrators in Parliament today will prove to be very costly. Today he admitted in the House that BJP is cutting the votes of the Purvanchal brothers of Delhi by calling them Rohingya. BJP will have to apologize to the Eastern brothers of Delhi."
https://x.com/ArvindKejriwal/status/1869032041909518667
Earlier, Arvind Kejriwal had accused the BJP of 'trying to cut votes' from the voter lists ahead of the Delhi Assembly election
Kejriwal alleged that the BJP had submitted an application to the Election Commission of India to cut the votes of 11,000 people, citing that either these people had shifted or passed away. Kejriwal added that AAP randomly checked 500 people from the list and found that 372 people are still living there.