LOADING...
Summarize
Democrats seek Umar Khalid's release; BJP slams 'Rahul Gandhi-anti-India lobby'
BJP's Pradeep Bhandari posted a photo of Gandhi

Democrats seek Umar Khalid's release; BJP slams 'Rahul Gandhi-anti-India lobby'

Jan 02, 2026
04:34 pm

What's the story

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has linked Congress leader Rahul Gandhi's 2024 United States visit with an "anti-India" narrative. The BJP's Pradeep Bhandari posted a photo of Gandhi with US lawmakers Jan Schakowsky and Ilhan Omar, claiming, "Those who want to weaken India, defame its elected government, and dilute its anti-terror laws converge around him (Gandhi)." Schakowsky, along with seven other Democratic lawmakers, recently urged India to release Umar Khalid, accused in the 2020 Delhi riots case.

Proposed legislation

Schakowsky's bill and its implications

Explaining how the "Rahul Gandhi-anti-India works," Bhandari said after the trio's meeting in 2024, Schakowsky reintroduced the "Combating International Islamophobia Act" in January 2025. This bill, which mentions India, seeks to create an office to monitor and combat Islamophobia. It also calls for existing reports on human rights and religious freedom in foreign countries to include information about Islamophobia and anti-Muslim propaganda in government-controlled media.

BJP

'Every time anti-India narrative is peddled abroad...'

"Cut to 2026: The same Jan Schakowsky writes to the Government of India, raising 'concerns' over Umar Khalid—an accused under UAPA in serious cases linked to riots and violence," Bhandari added. He said every time an anti-India narrative is peddled abroad, "one name keeps recurring in the background: Rahul Gandhi."

Twitter Post

Bhandari shares picture 

Letter of concern

US lawmakers express concern over Khalid's detention

On December 30, Schakowsky and seven other US lawmakers wrote to the Indian government expressing concern over Khalid's detention. The letter urged India to grant him bail and ensure a trial "in accordance with international law." Democrat Jim McGovern, one of the signatories, said he met Khalid's parents and called for a fair trial. The letter questioned the strength of evidence against Khalid and urged India to uphold rights under international covenants.

Legal proceedings

Khalid's bail plea reaches Supreme Court

Khalid has been in jail since 2020 under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act for allegedly conspiring the Delhi riots in February 2020, which left over 50 people dead. He was granted interim bail from December 16-29, 2025, to attend his sister's wedding. Khalid's legal battle for bail has now reached the Supreme Court. Last month, a bench reserved judgment on his plea.