Former Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal strongly criticized the Union government after the Enforcement Directorate (ED) conducted raids at the residence of Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) leader and former health minister Saurabh Bharadwaj. Kejriwal alleged that the AAP is being singled out by the ruling BJP because it is the most vocal voice against the Modi government.
Kejriwal alleged that the search at Bharadwaj’s residence was another instance of the Modi government’s misuse of central agencies. He asserted that no political party in history had been targeted the way the AAP was being targeted, the only reason behind this was AAP’s consistent opposition to the government’s wrong policies and corruption. He emphasized that despite such actions, the party would not be silenced.
He said that the raids were strategically carried out to shift public focus away from the controversy linked to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s academic degree. He claimed that the revelation about the Prime Minister’s degree had created a stir in the country, and the ED’s action was intended to shift focus. Kejriwal remarked that even a child would find it laughable that the raid pertained to a case from before Bharadwaj became a minister.
AAP’s national media in-charge, Anurag Dhanda, echoed the same sentiment, calling the searches fake raids. He argued that the case under which Bharadwaj is being probed relates to a period when he was not even a minister. Drawing parallels with former Delhi minister Satyendar Jain’s case, Dhanda alleged that agencies had fabricated charges in the past and later admitted in court that no evidence was found.
The ED, however, maintained that the searches were linked to a money laundering probe concerning suspected irregularities in hospital construction projects across Delhi. Officials said raids began early Tuesday morning at 13 locations, including Bharadwaj’s residence, across the Delhi-NCR region.
The agency stated that the operation stemmed from an Enforcement Case Information Report (ECIR) registered in relation to the Delhi hospital construction scam. The FIR, registered on June 26, 2025, by the Anti-Corruption Branch (ACB) of Delhi Police, accuses former health ministers of the Delhi government, private contractors, and unidentified officials of large-scale corruption, unjustified cost escalations, unauthorized constructions, and misappropriation of public funds.
The ED clarified that the searches were being conducted under Section 17 of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002, and were backed by material collected during ongoing investigations.