AAP national convener Arvind Kejriwal today announced that the party's Sangrur MP Bhagwant Mann will contest Punjab assembly polls against Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal from Jalalabad constituency.
If Badal changes his mind and plans to contest from any other seat, Bhagwant Mann will follow him, he said at a rally in Jalalabad, Badal's political home-turf, on the first day of his 11-day tour of poll-bound Punjab.
"Tomorrow, I will also make public the details of Swiss bank accounts of Punjab Congress chief Amarinder Singh and his family members. He has amassed huge wealth by looting Punjab when he was the chief minister from 2002 to 2007," the Delhi Chief Minister alleged.
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"In AAP, it's a trend. Kejriwal started it. He trounced former Delhi chief minister Sheela Dixit twice. I feel honoured that this opportunity in Punjab has been given to me," the MP said, daring Amarinder to fight polls in Jalalabad instead of his traditional seat of Amritsar.
Kejriwal alleged that Amarinder had amassed huge wealth during his tenure as chief minister and transferred this "loot" to foreign accounts of his son Raninder Singh and wife Parneet Kaur.
"They have been summoned by law enforcement agencies including the Income-Tax Department and the Enforcement Directorate," he said.
Meanwhile, responding to Kejriwal's threat to release documents to prove he and his family had foreign bank accounts, Amarinder described it as yet another theatrical gimmick by the AAP national convener.
Attacking the SAD-BJP government, Kejriwal said, "After Amarinder, the Akalis have plundered Punjab in its 10 years of misrule. Akali mafia runs every business -- transport, liquor, cable, mining, hotel or land."
"Bikram Majithia is running a drug racket in Punjab and I challenge him to get me arrested within the remaining two months of the SAD-BJP rule. If AAP forms government, I will put him behind bars," he said.
On the issue of demonetisation, Kejriwal tweeted, "The BJP says it is a party for Hindus. In demonetisation, it did not even spare them. Hindus have also suffered."
However, he did not make a mention of the three-day ultimatum, which ended today, to the Centre to roll back its decision to scrap Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes.
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