Acharya Pramod Krishnam, head of Kalki Dham, has joined the chorus of critics branding Rahul Gandhi a full-blown national problem, transcending his role as Congress’s albatross. In a pointed Sambhal interview with IANS on February 19, he attributed this to Gandhi’s ‘untreatable illness,’ drawing stark resemblances to separatist and anarchist patterns.
‘His actions ape Kashmir separatists and disorderly radicals—what drives this?’ Krishnam challenged, framing it as a progression from party peril to patriotic peril.
The seer’s tirade amplifies Union Minister Kiren Rijiju’s Lok Sabha critique, where he contrasted Gandhi’s paper-throwing disruptions with his own decorous opposition conduct. Rijiju bemoaned how such Maoist-like antics paralyze proceedings on growth imperatives.
Krishnam nodded to Rijiju while dissecting INDIA alliance fault lines: Akhilesh Yadav’s prowess marred by institutional awkwardness, Mamata Banerjee’s bold claims despite blemishes—positioning Gandhi as oddly apt.
Giriraj Singh’s earlier broadside labeled Gandhi’s farmer rhetoric as baseless fearmongering, echoing Rafale deceptions. As an ‘urban Naxal’ parroting Pakistan-aligned narratives, Singh called for incarceration to stem the tide.
Collectively, these indictments from BJP stalwarts and spiritual influencers spotlight a leader accused of eroding institutional norms. With democracy’s health in question, the fallout promises to reverberate through upcoming political showdowns.
