RV
688 posts









Back in 2020, @KanoongoPriyank misused his official position to target me. He assisted an abusive troll in filing two FIRs against me in Delhi and Chhattisgarh invoking the POCSO Act. He also wrote to both the Delhi and Raipur Police, claiming that my tweet amounted to the torture and harassment of a minor girl, tried his best to have me arrested under POCSO. In 2024, the Delhi Police cleared my name in the FIR. The Delhi High Court also pulled up the police for their aggressive approach and directed the abusive troll who had filed the complaint to publicly apologize for posting offensive tweets targeting me. In 2025, the Raipur Police filed a closure report, and the Chhattisgarh court disposed of the matter. And now, the same man lectures about “media ki swatantrata.”




Ten lifetimes won't be enough for your Bangla Birodhi Gujarati gang and their stooge Gyanesh Kumar to put even a dent in my DIAMOND HARBOUR MODEL. Bring everything you have got. I challenge the entire Union of India- Come to Falta. Send your strongest, send one of the godfathers from Delhi. If you have got the nerve, contest in Falta.








Munna Badnaam Hua Falta Tere Liye! Fair & Lovely Babua clearly couldn’t dance his way out of his Bengal assignment - @ECISVEEP had to re-poll the entire constituency of Falta due to his ineptitude.

On World Press Freedom Day, the nation must confront a stark and undeniable reality. Since 2014, India’s position in the World Press Freedom Index has steadily declined, falling to 157th place, under the BJP regime. A free press, in its truest sense, does not exist to amplify the government’s narrative or conceal its failures. It exists to question authority, to scrutinise power, and to hold those in office accountable. The media preserves the Democratic balance between power and the people. Journalists are the custodians of public truth. As Pandit Nehru had said, “The freedom of the Press is not just a slogan but an essential attribute of the democratic process.” That essential attribute stands gravely compromised under the present regime. The Sangh Parivar has increasingly weaponised legal frameworks to silence newsrooms. Defamation laws, national security provisions, and sweeping criminal statutes are deployed not as instruments of justice, but as tools of intimidation. Between 2014 and 2020, over 135 journalists were arrested, detained, or interrogated. Between 2014 and 2023, 36 journalists were imprisoned. The scale of persecution has risen sharply, with several journalists booked under draconian laws such as the UAPA. At the same time, a far more disturbing pattern has emerged, one of violence and impunity. Journalists are being murdered in BJP-ruled states for doing their job. Raghvendra Bajpai in Uttar Pradesh, Mukesh Chandrakar in Chhattisgarh, Rajeev Pratap Singh in Uttarakhand, and Dharmendra Singh Chauhan in Haryana, each of them was reporting on corruption and issues of public interest. Today, they stand as grim reminders of the cost of speaking truth to power. Not satisfied with its existing control, the BJP-RSS government, in its quest for total dominance, is now seeking to tighten its stranglehold over social media in an attempt to silence it. The message of the BJP-RSS is clear: independent journalism will be punished, and compliance will be rewarded. Sections of the media have been reduced to echoing the ruling establishment, while those who persist in asking questions are targeted relentlessly. As we observe, World Press Freedom Day, it is time for deep introspection by all stakeholders. Most importantly, those in power must always uphold the long-established norms of Democracy. Any deviation from these principles, if allowed to persist over time, risks becoming normalised and even accepted, causing lasting damage to democratic norms, values, institutions, and the people they serve. The government of the day must, therefore, hold itself to the highest possible standards.












