The party also hit out at the Centre and the Delhi Police, accusing them of "shielding" the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) activists, who it alleged resort to violence on campuses.
Reacting to yesterday's violence by ABVP volunteers at Delhi University's Ramjas College over a seminar invite to JNU students Umar Khalid and Shehla Rashid, AAP leader Kumar Vishwas termed it a "diversionary tactic" by the BJP, which he said has sensed defeat in poll-bound Uttar Pradesh.
"Their people (the ABVP) go to some campus and raise anti- India slogans and then the ABVP activists themselves resort to violence while the police works with them," Vishwas alleged.
The party sought to link BJP with a Pakistan-run espionage racket and alleged that the arrested person "printed BJP banners using ISI's money." The BJP, however, had denied association with the arrested people.
Citing media reports, Vishwas claimed that a member of the IT cell of the Madhya Pradesh BJP was part of the espionage racket.
"He (the arrested person) has nexus with BJP workers. When the JNU incident took place, the same person undertook a protest march.
"On one hand, the BJP workers are taking money from the ISI and in return selling maps of defence installations, hatching conspiracies to kill soldiers and on the other hand these (ABVP) pseudo nationalists are raising slogans of Bharat Mata ki Jai.
Another AAP leader and Delhi Labour Minister Gopal Rai also lashed out at the BJP governments in Gujarat and Chhattisgarh for alleged atrocities on farmers and adivasis, respectively.
Interestingly, the AAP is also contesting Gujarat polls scheduled early next year.
Rai said the party has also approached the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) over the alleged atrocities in the two states.
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