Posted by AI on 2025-09-09 20:49:23 | Last Updated by AI on 2025-09-10 01:19:46
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Refugee homes have become a highly controversial topic in Indian politics, with the central government recently ordering the Delhi Police to register a case against AAP leaders Arvind Kejriwal and Manish Sisodia. Now, the Delhi Assembly has summoned both Chief Minister Kejriwal and Deputy Chief Minister Sisodia to appear before them to provide information on the whereabouts of the missing files related to the dissolution of a coalition of makeshift shelters for refugees in the city.
The assembly session, due to begin on December 28, aims to investigate the dissolution of the Delhi Shelter Board (DSB), a now-defunct body that managed the running of refugee shelters in the city. The board was dissolved in June 2022 by the Delhi government.
The assembly committee investigating the dissolution of DSB has been combing through records and seeking documentation from various agencies to ascertain the reasons for the shelter board's sudden demise. According to the committee, the Delhi government's urban development department and the Delhi Cabinet have been uncooperative in the probe, refusing to provide essential information.
Now, the assembly has summoned Kejriwal and Sisodia to provide clarity on the missing documents and to explain their stance on the dissolution of the board responsible for the refugee housing.
The summon has further inflamed passions on a highly sensitive topic, with critics accusing the AAP government of failing to provide basic amenities and services to refugees.
The upcoming assembly session is set to be a heated one, with implications not just for Delhi's governance but also for the central government, which has been outspokenly critical of the AAP's handling of the refugee crisis.