Digvijaya Singh Booked by Bhopal Crime Branch for Sharing ‘Edited’ Video of CM Shivraj Chouhan
The FIR has been filed under various sections of the Indian Penal Code, a day after a BJP delegation headed by former minister Umashankar Gupta submitted a memorandum to the crime branch of Bhopal police.
The Bhopal Crime Branch on Monday enrolled an FIR against senior Congress pioneer Digvijaya Singh regarding the dissemination of a claimed “edited” video of Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan’s old articulation on alcohol.
The FIR has been recorded under different areas of the Indian Penal Code, a day after a BJP designation headed by previous minister Umashankar Gupta presented a reminder to the crime branch of Bhopal police body of evidence against Digvijaya Singh for sharing the “edited” video on Twitter.
In their grievance to the crime branch, the BJP pioneers said that Chouhan had given an announcement against the alcohol strategy of the then Kamal Nath government on January 12 this year.
This 2.19-minute video was edited and a nine-second piece of it was shared on Twitter by Singh to insult the picture of the chief minister, the BJP pioneers said in the grumbling.
Be that as it may, Digvijaya Singh after the disturbance said – “Tribals of Budhni have hoodwinked of Rs 450 crore by specialists of SS Chouhan and no FIR was enrolled in his residency. I had kept in touch with him that if there is no activity, I’ll stage a demonstration fight at his living arrangement. It irritated BJP. It ought to be watched who edited the video.”
They had requested an argument against the senior Congress pioneer and his partners for “planning to insult the CM’s picture”.
BJP MLA Rameshwar Sharma likewise shared the screen capture of Digvijaya Singh’s tweet and said that the post has now been erased.
In the meantime, Madhya Pradesh Home Minister Narottam Mishra said that he has guided the authorities to make an exacting legitimate move against the guilty parties, who wound the CMs articulation against the alcohol mafia.
The Congress has not yet responded to this issue. “The video was shared via web-based networking media and countless individuals shared it. The police ought to go to the wellspring of the video as opposed to making it a policy centered issue,” a Congress chief said on state of namelessness.
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