Meanwhile, after the incident occurred in wee hours yesterday, the Maratha strongman and NCP chief Sharad Pawar condemned it this evening, saying, "the battle of thoughts should be fought only with thought. I have not come across any such writing (as alleged by those who vandalised the bust) by Gadkari."
Addressing a rally in Pune today, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis said the incident was aimed at creating a "rift" in society as elections are round the corner and that his government will find out "real culprits" at whose behest the act was carried out.
Interestingly, in the wake of the incident, Congress MLA and Swabhiman Sanghatna president Nitesh Rane had claimed in a tweet the Maratha group has nothing to do with the vandalism.
In an edit in "Saamana", Sena said the act went against Maharashtra's cultural ethos.
"Those who have claimed that Gadkari has insulted Chhatrapati Sambhaji are enemies of Maharashtra's social and cultural ethos. Those who have attacked his bust under cover of darkness are enemies of Shivaji's school of thoughts and are traitors of Maharashtra," it said.
The party said the incident underlines the state of law and order in Maharashtra.
Fadnavis said, "Four people who executed the act are arrested, however, the government will find out who are the real culprits on whose directions the entire act was carried out."
Meanwhile, the bust was recovered from Mutha river along the Sambhaji garden in Pune by local police.
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