News Flash
BENGALURU, India, June 7, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - An Indian court Friday granted
bail to opposition leader Rahul Gandhi in the latest of several defamation
cases brought against him for accusing Prime Minister Narendra Modi or his
party of corruption.
Gandhi, 53, has faced numerous legal cases brought by members of the ruling
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and was last year briefly disqualified from
parliament after a criminal libel conviction.
He is one of several top opposition leaders to face criminal proceedings in
cases they claim are politically driven by Modi's government.
The latest case stems from advertisements published by Gandhi's Congress
party accusing the BJP of corruptly taking commissions from infrastructure
projects in southern Karnataka state.
Gandhi, 53, has not spent any time in custody over the charge.
He was granted bail in a five-minute procedural hearing held to determine if
he should remain at liberty, Congress spokesperson Randeep Surjewala
confirmed to AFP.
Two other senior Congress figures in Karnataka state had already been bailed
last week, neither of whom were in custody beforehand.
Gandhi was sentenced to two years imprisonment last year in 2023 in a
separate case in Gujarat but was not jailed after appealing with India's top
court.
The sentence did however force his brief disqualification from parliament
until the Supreme Court suspended his conviction.
Friday's case came days after Modi and the BJP won nationwide elections,
albeit with a reduced majority forcing them to rely on coalition partners to
govern.
Critics have accused Modi and his party of using the justice system to target
political rivals.
US think tank Freedom House said the BJP had "increasingly used government
institutions to target political opponents".
Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, whose party is a member of a broad
opposition alliance led by Congress, was jailed this year in connection with
an ongoing graft investigation.
Kejriwal was briefly bailed last month, allowing him to campaign in the
election, but returned to custody once voting concluded.