"It was surprising that an elected representative, CM of a state who is a keeper and maker of law, is himself defying the court order," DPCC spokesperson Sharmishtha Mukherjee claimed.
She alleged that advertisements carrying Kejriwal's photographs were "yet to be removed" from various public places in the city.
"You can not expect the taxpayer to help the government. We strongly demand an audit of the money spent on advertisements for extra days (of display), after the Supreme Court order and it should be paid for by Kejriwal or the Aam Admi Party," Mukherjee said.
The Supreme Court on Wednesday issued a slew of guidelines on regulation of public advertisements and said that they can carry pictures of certain dignitaries like the President, Prime Minister and the Chief Justice of India.
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Referring to the issue concerning chairperson of Delhi Commission for Women, Barkha Singh, the DPCC spokesperson alleged that Barkha was subjected to "humiliation" and "nasty attack" on social media since she issued a notice to AAP leader Kumar Vishwas.
"When she issued summon to Kumar Vishwas, I don't think she was overstepping her duty. She also said that she tried to contact Vishwas several times and wrote a mail to him but received no reply. She also tried to contact Kejriwal. She waited for their response before she issued the summon."