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Even Manohar Lal Khattar was better as Haryana CM than Nayab Saini, says former deputy chief minister Dushyant Chautala

Even Manohar Lal Khattar was better as Haryana CM than Nayab Saini, says former deputy chief minister Dushyant Chautala

Time of India5 hours ago
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Jind: Former Haryana deputy chief minister
Dushyant Chautala
has launched a blistering attack on the BJP-led state govt, accusing chief minister Nayab Singh Saini of losing control over law and order and branding his administration a "gayab sarkar" — a missing govt.
Chautala, who leads the Jannayak Janta Party (JJP), said during a public address in Jind: "Police are nowhere, and criminals everywhere. Even Manohar Lal Khattar was better than Nayab Saini. If the CM can't control his police, he should hand over charge to Anil Vij — at least he'd suspend someone." Chautala claimed Haryana had become a safe haven for criminals from other states and that policing had collapsed under the current dispensation.
He claimed that: "Crime meetings that used to be held every two to three months have stopped. Threats are being issued from inside jails. In Gurugram, a man was shot just metres from a police outpost," he said. Drawing a historical contrast, Chautala referenced his grandfather and former chief minister O P Chautala's tenure: "Murders began during Bansi Lal's time, but Chautala Saheb ended hooliganism within six months.
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" He also criticised the BJP for "sidelining senior politician Anil Vij", claiming the former state home minister had been rendered powerless in the current cabinet.
Turning his fire on the Congress, Chautala accused its central leader of opposition, Rahul Gandhi, of losing grip on his own party. "The Congress is so divided that even selecting the LoP isn't in Rahul's control. He has mortgaged himself to one leader," he claimed, without naming anyone. The remarks come amid mounting political heat in Haryana, where the opposition has zeroed in on rising crime.
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Over ₹1,000 crore siphoned off through cyber frauds in 4 years in Madhya Pradesh; recovery rate below 0.2%
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