India's top court allows release on bail of New Delhi's chief minister after 6 months in jail
UNB
Publish: 13 Sep 2024, 05:43 PM
NEW
DELHI, Sep 13 (AP/UNB) - India's top court on Friday allowed the release on
bail of Arvind Kejriwal, a prominent opposition leader and chief minister of
New Delhi, who was arrested nearly six months ago ahead of national elections
on charges of receiving bribes from a liquor distributor.
Supreme Court Justices
Surya Kant and Ujjal Bhuyan granted him bail because his trial is expected to
take time.
Kejriwal is the leader
of the Aam Aadmi Party, or Common Man's Party, which governs New Delhi. He is one
of India's most influential politicians of the past decade and a fierce critic
of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Kejriwal was initially
arrested in March, weeks before national elections. He denied the accusations
and called them a political conspiracy.
His party is part of a
broad alliance of opposition parties called INDIA which was the main challenger
to Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party in the elections, which
concluded in June.
Kejriwal's arrest was
widely condemned by opposition parties as a move by Modi's government against
its opponents. They accused the government of misusing federal investigation
agencies to harass and weaken its political opponents, and pointed to a series
of raids, arrests and corruption investigations of key opposition figures in
the months before the elections.
Kejriwal was released
temporarily on bail in May to allow him to campaign in the elections before
returning to jail on June 2. The Supreme Court granted him interim bail in
July, but he was rearrested by another government agency, blocking his release.
The court granted him bail in that case on Friday.
The government agencies
accused Kejriwal's party and ministers of accepting 1 billion rupees ($12
million) in bribes from a liquor distributor nearly two years ago in return for
revising a liquor sales policy in New Delhi, allowing private companies greater
profits.
Kejriwal's release will
boost his party, which faces new elections in New Delhi by February next year.
Kejriwal, a former civil
servant, launched the Aam Aadmi Party in 2012. He promised to rid the Indian
political system and governance of corruption and inefficiency.
The party's symbol - a
broom - and its promise to sweep the administration of graft struck a chord
with New Delhi's residents, fed up with runaway inflation and slow economic
growth.
End/UNB/AP/MB