BJP national spokesperson Sambit Patra dropped a political bombshell at a Delhi presser, dubbing Rahul Gandhi ‘India’s biggest traitor’ over Youth Congress activists’ audacious disruption at the AI Summit. The Bharat Mandapam venue became a flashpoint, exposing what Patra termed a vicious plot to tarnish the nation’s global standing.
Details emerged of the covert operation: Activists Krishna Hari, Kundan Yadav, Ajay Kumar, and Narsimha Yadav secured entry with fake pretenses—official registrations and barcodes—sporting flipped T-shirts. Inside, they shed layers for a topless dhurna, prompting swift police action.
Patra linked the scheme directly to Rahul Gandhi’s home, attended by Sonia and Priyanka, framing it as top-down sabotage. Against the summit’s backdrop—100 nations, 20 state heads, 60 ministers, legions of CEOs, researchers, 250,000 visitors—the act reeked of desperation.
Praising the event as India’s tech renaissance, symbolizing startup vitality and Gen Z innovation, Patra slammed Congress for politicizing a non-partisan milestone. ‘Youth nationwide, especially the young brigade, are livid at this image-smearing stunt,’ he noted.
In an era of India’s heightened international clout, Patra portrayed the protest as profoundly unfortunate, aimed at undercutting youth capabilities and achievements. He urged discernment: this was India’s show, not BJP’s.
As dialogues on AI’s future dominate the summit, Patra’s indictment spotlights Congress’s missteps. It culminates in a call to safeguard national pride, with public sentiment poised to reject such divisive maneuvers in favor of collective progress.
