
‘This is India, not North Korea’: Rahul attacks PM Modi over crackdown on Youth Cong
Leader of Opposition accuses Modi govt of crushing dissent after ‘shirtless protest’ arrests, says peaceful protest is democracy’s strength, not a crime.
Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Thursday (February 26) strongly criticised the police action against Youth Congress activists over the “shirtless protest,” drawing a sharp comparison between Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government and the authoritarian regime in North Korea.
“This is India, not North Korea,” said the Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha, in a Hindi post on X, asserting that peaceful protest is the soul of democracy, not a crime. He added that the world’s largest democracy is being gradually pushed in a direction where dissent is branded as treason and asking questions is portrayed as a conspiracy.
Rahul slams curbs on dissent
When those in power start seeing themselves as the nation and dissent as the enemy, that is when democracy dies, Rahul said.
Also read | ‘Deep conspiracy’ found in IYC 'shirtless protest' at AI Summit: Delhi Police
“In today’s India, under the rule of a compromised PM, peaceful protest has been turned into the biggest crime. The world’s largest democracy is being slowly pushed in a direction where dissent is labelled as treason and asking questions is called a conspiracy," the former Congress chief said.
"Think about it, no matter the issue, if you raise your voice against those in power through constitutional means, then batons, lawsuits, and jail are almost a certainty," he said.
Youth tormented by paper leaks raised their voices for their future and were met with blows from batons, he claimed.
"The country's proud women wrestlers demanded a fair investigation into serious allegations against a powerful BJP leader. Their cries were defamed, their movement crushed, and they were forcibly removed from the streets.”
"A peaceful demonstration took place at India Gate in support of a rape victim. The demand for justice was deemed an inconvenience to the system and dispersed," Rahul said.
Row over Youth Congress arrests
When the Youth Congress peacefully protested against a US trade deal "harmful" to the country, they were branded "anti-national" and arrested, he said.
When ordinary people stood up against poisonous air, even concerns for the environment were dismissed as "politics" and suppressed, Rahul said, adding that when farmers protested for their rights, they too were labelled anti-national.
"Tear gas, rubber bullets, water cannons, and batons -- these became the means of dialogue. When tribals stood up for their rights to water, forests, and land, suspicion was cast upon them too -- as if demanding one's rights is a crime. What kind of democracy is this, where a Compromised PM fears questions? Where crushing dissent is becoming the nature of governance?" he said.
Asking questions is not democracy's weakness, it is its strength, he said.
Also read | AI Summit protest: Dramatic standoff between Delhi, Shimla police ends after 24 hours
"Democracy grows stronger when the government listens to criticism, responds, and remains accountable. Modiji, this is India, not North Korea. When those in power start seeing themselves as the nation and dissent as the enemy -- that is when democracy dies," Rahul said.
His remarks came after a high-voltage standoff between the police teams of Delhi and Shimla came to an end following a dramatic 24 hours on Thursday morning, after the Delhi Police team was finally cleared to head back to the national capital along with the three Youth Congress activists arrested in connection with the "shirtless protest" at the AI Summit.
(With agency inputs)

