
BJP and Congress ruled Punjab by destroying the community: NK Sharma
Patiala, April 30 - Shiromani Akali Dal candidate from Patiala Lok Sabha constituency NK Sharma has accused the BJP and Congress of spoiling the communal harmony of Punjab and said that today in Punjab if anyone talks about Hindu-Sikh community. | So he is only Shiromani Akali Dal. Akali Dal has always respected all religions.
Patiala, April 30 - Shiromani Akali Dal candidate from Patiala Lok Sabha constituency NK Sharma has accused the BJP and Congress of spoiling the communal harmony of Punjab and said that today in Punjab if anyone talks about Hindu-Sikh community. | So he is only Shiromani Akali Dal. Akali Dal has always respected all religions.
NK Sharma interacted with workers in Patiala during election campaign. He said that during Shiromani Akali Dal government, Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal has built memorials in the state respecting all religions. At the same time, the policies of Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party have always been destructive to Hindu-Sikh brotherhood. These parties have always tried to rule the people of Punjab by dividing them among themselves in the name of religion.
Now for the last two years Aam Aadmi Party has also followed the same path. Sharma said that by following the policies of Congress and BJP, Aam Aadmi Party is destroying the communal harmony of Punjab. Visionless government has come to power for the first time in Punjab. This government has not done any work in the name of development in two years and has spent 750 crore rupees on propaganda. NK Sharma said that on one hand Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann is pretending to publicize the anti-corruption cell numbers and on the other hand AAP leaders are openly promoting corruption.
He said that after becoming a Member of Parliament, he would take action against the corrupt on the basis of priority in all 9 assembly constituencies on the lines of the Akali government. He said that it has been a tradition of Patiala Lok Sabha Constituency for twenty years that MPs have closed their doors to the public after winning the election, but once the public gives them a chance, they will remain available to the public for five years.
