Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Narendra Modi has written a letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh demanding action against Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde’s advisory on releasing “minority youth” detained wrongfully.
Modi, BJP’s PM candidate, who is very popular and active on social networking website twitter, today wrote: “Home Minister’s suggestion marks an unprecedented low for our country. PM should intervene & take necessary action.”
Referring to the Home Minister’s letter to chief ministers to review cases of terrorism against “members of minority communities,” Modi wrote, “A crime is a crime irrespective of birth marks of the criminal. Religious beliefs can’t determine guilt or innocence.”
“Wrote letter to Prime Minister on the Home Minister’s repeated statements on wrongful arrests of youngsters from particular communities. A crime is a crime irrespective of birth marks of the criminal. Religious beliefs can’t determine guilt or innocence,” the Gujarat Chief Minister posted on his twitter account.
Heaping praise on the judicial system, the BJP leader said, “Thankfully, our criminal justice system has never taken into account faith or religion of an accused.”
Modi accused the Congress-led government of playing votebank politics over security issues.
In a letter that has generated a political controversy, Shinde last week asked all state chief ministers to be “careful” while arresting minorities.
The Home Minister wrote to state chief ministers on detention procedures, asking them to form a panel to review cases of people jailed without trial. “Release minority youths if they are illegally detained,” Shinde wrote.


Not only political parties but the common man too is eagerly looking forward to the general election. Many north Indians belonging to UP and Bihar are planning to visit their village to cast their votes in favour of BJP’s prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi. These people are registered voters in their native place and hence can’t exercise their franchise in Mumbai. Most of these voters belong to lower middle class and are employed as vendors, drivers and grocers in the city. They want Narendra Modi to become the next prime minister of India.
Senior diplomat Devyani Khobragade, who returned to India last week after being indicted for visa fraud in the United States, arrived in Mumbai on Tuesday.
In a shocking case, an 11-year-old domestic help was badly beaten up, kept starving for days and forcefully fed chillies allegedly by a local trader and his wife.
The Bombay High Court has directed the Maharashtra government to file its response by January 24 on a PIL challenging collection of 15 paise surcharge on bus fare from every passenger for relief of Bangladesh refugees since 1971.
A professor suspended by the University of Mumbai took his classes on a road outside the campus gates with about 40 students seated on newspapers, a sleepy dog also in attendance.
Awarding a fixed compensation for future medical expenses of accident victims can be avoided in extreme cases where the victim is completely incapacitated, the Bombay High Court said while directing monthly financial aide to a woman rendered quadriplegic after a road accident. 
