The woman, Bhavna Arora, a resident of west Delhi, came quite close to the lectern when Kejriwal was delivering his speech, waved some papers towards him, and then threw ink at the Chief Minister. There were ink stains on Kejriwal's cheeks and some others standing close to him were also seen wiping off the liquid.
Delhi police has sought permission from a duty magistrate to arrest the 26-year-old woman.
Reacting sharply to the incident, an agitated Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia slammed the Delhi Police, calling the incident a "major security lapse" and wondered whether it was "sitting in readiness to stage an attack on Kejriwal."
"I can see a BJP conspiracy. They want to take advantage of such a situation and attack Kejriwal and the entire Cabinet. They may also kill people because they cannot stand the success of the odd-even scheme and AAP's popularity among the masses. Police is a part of the conspiracy," he told
Responding to the charge, Delhi police said those were "misconceived and unfounded".
"A case has been registered and investigation will be done by Delhi Police," Rajan Bhagat, Delhi Police spokesman said.
The incident happened around 4.50 PM when Kejriwal was five minutes into his address at the rally organised by the city government to thank people of Delhi for making the pilot road-rationing scheme a "grand success".
There was a commotion following the ink attack, forcing Kejriwal to halt his speech for around seven minutes.
"Whenever something good is attempted in the country or in Delhi some forces create all sorts of hurdles. As Gopal Rai said, many forces had tried to ensure the odd-even scheme failed," he said.
On Sisodia's allegation, Upadhyay said, "The incident could well be a case of the activist's frustration or stage- managed by Kejriwal himself to play his usual victim card."
The woman, on her part, claimed that she has "proof in the form of a CD" that "these people have committed CNG scam". While being whisked away by the police she also threw some papers toward the dais.
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