In a fiery rebuttal amid the AI Summit in New Delhi’s Bharat Mandapam, BJP stalwart Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi lambasted Youth Congress for their disruptive antics, claiming the grand old party is seething over Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s transformative leadership.
During an IANS interview, Naqvi laid bare what he called a ‘chronology of criminal acts’ meticulously orchestrated by Congress. He harked back to 2015, when heads of state from 54 African countries gathered in India, only for the ‘Return of Awards’ movement to hog headlines and undermine the occasion.
Fast-forward to 2019-20: As American President and his team landed amid international media glare, Shaheen Bagh blockades protesting CAA dominated narratives. ‘While PM Modi and Trump deliberated crucial issues, global reporters chased chaos at JNU and Shaheen Bagh,’ Naqvi observed.
The pattern persisted at the G20, with Rahul Gandhi’s globe-trotting rants about constitutional threats. At the ongoing AI Summit drawing 20-nation representatives, Congress stooped to vulgar protests. ‘They can’t fathom a poor, backward-class man propelling India forward,’ Naqvi remarked pointedly.
Constitutional rights allow expression, Naqvi stressed, but not license for hooliganism. ‘If Congress persists in these conspiracies to malign India, their downfall is certain,’ he predicted.
Commenting on Gujarat’s parental consent mandate for weddings, Naqvi called for straightforward social policies rooted in transparency. ‘Governments act with pure intent—to foster societal good without ambiguities.’
Naqvi’s words resonate as a broader indictment of opposition tactics, positioning Modi’s India as resilient against orchestrated sabotage. With AI innovation at the forefront, such protests merely underscore Congress’s irrelevance in a rising nation.