Badal also alleged that some "irresponsible" political leaders were "hell bent" upon dividing the people on sectarian lines and "disintegrating" the country with the sole motive of pursuing their narrow vested interests.
He was addressing a gathering after paying tributes on Martyrdom Day of Fateh Singh and Zoravar Singh - the younger Sahibzadas of 10th Sikh Guru Gobind Singh -- during the state- level Shaheedi Conference here.
Branding Congress as "number one enemy of Sikhs", the chief minister said it was an established fact that it had done lot of "injustice" to the state by depriving it of its capital, legitimate share in river waters, and Punjabi speaking areas.
He said Congress had inflicted a "deep wound" on the Sikh psyche by attacking the Golden Temple and by "killing thousands of innocent Sikhs" during the 1984 riots.
More From This Section
Badal said that the Congress was solely responsible for decade-long militancy in the state in which more than 21,000 people were killed and thus the state's economy was derailed beyond anyone's imagination.
On the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), the chief minister said it was a "frustrated lot of novices" which has already been rejected by the people and that its Delhi "model of administrative failure" was a proof of its inability to handle state affairs.
He advised the people to consider whether a party was capable to fulfil their needs and aspirations before supporting it as, he said, lending support to any political party tantamount to handing over their "destiny" to them for which they had to "repent" later for any "unwise" decision.