New Delhi: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi made a big attack on Prime Minister Narendra Modi. On Tuesday, the Congress leader tweeted that, “Before 2014, the word ‘lynching’ was not even heard.” Along with this, the Congress leader also thanked PM Modi. At the same time, when the journalists questioned Rahul about his tweet, he got angry and called the journalist a broker of the government. Whose video has gone viral on social media.
In fact, on Tuesday, Rahul Gandhi addressed a press conference held in the Parliament House complex with leaders of all opposition parties. During this, a journalist questioned him about the launch. As soon as he asked the journalist, Rahul got angry and silenced the journalist and said, “Don’t broker the government here, be a journalist.” When the Congress leader called the journalist a broker, all the opposition parties including Sanjay Raut present there were laughing.
#WATCH | Congress leader Rahul Gandhi responds when asked about his today’s tweet on ‘lynching’. pic.twitter.com/UUxi3bpSOa
– ANI (@ANI) December 21, 2021
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1984’s Massacre Biggest Launching
Reversing Rahul’s attack, Union Minister Anurag Thakur has also attacked. “The biggest example of ‘lynching’ is the incidents after the death of former PM Indira Gandhi in 1984,” Thakur said. Attacking Congress leader Rahul Gandhi for calling a journalist a ‘broker’, the Union Minister said, “Rahul Gandhi’s reply to a media question today on ‘lynching’, reminds us of the Emergency era.”
Father of Rajiv Gandhi Lynching
Earlier BJP IT cell chief Amit Malviya said, “Meet Rajiv Gandhi, the father of mob lynching, justifying the blood-soaked genocide of Sikhs. The Congress took to the streets, raised slogans like Khoon Ka Badla Khoon Se Lienge, raped women, wrapped burning tires around Sikh men’s necks, while dogs were carried on burnt bodies dumped in drains.
Malviya attacked Rahul by repeatedly tweeting. Malviya wrote, “Ahmedabad (1969), Jalgaon (1970), Moradabad (1980), Nelly (1983), Bhiwandi (1984), Delhi (1984), Ahmedabad (1985), Bhagalpur (1989), Hyderabad (1990), Kanpur (1992), Mumbai (1993)…this is just a small list in which more than 100 people died under the watch of the Nehru-Gandhi family.