Sanjay Singh (AAP politician)
Sanjay Singh (born 22 March 1972) is an Indian politician and activist, currently serving as a Member of Parliament for Delhi since 2018. Singh is also the national spokesman for the Aam Aadmi Party.
Sanjay Singh | |
|---|---|
Singh in 2013 | |
| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha | |
| Assumed office 28 January 2018 | |
| Preceded by | Karan Singh |
| Constituency | Delhi |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 22 March 1972 Sultanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India |
| Party | Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) |
Other political affiliations | Samajwadi Party (until 2007) |
| Spouse | Anita Singh |
| Children | 2 |
| Education | Diploma in Mining Engineering |
| Profession |
|
| Website | sanjaysingh |
He was active with Arvind Kejriwal in his campaigns, spanning from the Right to Information endeavour in 2006 to the IAC movement led by social activist Anna Hazare.
Career
editActivism
editHe formed the Azad Samaj Seva Samiti in Lucknow in 1994, which he has described as an initiative aimed at providing employment opportunities to economically disadvantaged communities.
He has been a fellow companion of socialist leader Raghu Thakur of the Democratic Socialist Party and participated in various welfare and socialist conferences and movements along with him. Singh also proffered his services for disaster relief operations in Gujarat, Uttarakhand, Jammu and Kashmir, Tamil Nadu and Nepal.
Aam Aadmi Party
editSingh is a founder member of Aam Aadmi Party. During the 2020 Delhi elections, he was designated the campaign in-charge along with Pankaj Gupta, who was entrusted the duties of the campaign director.[1]
Career as MP
editIn January 2018, Singh was elected as a Member of Parliament in Rajya Sabha from Delhi.[2]
During the furore and public outcry over the passing of the 2020 Indian agriculture acts by the BJP-led central government, Sanjay Singh, along with seven other members of the opposition, were suspended from the Rajya Sabha by its Deputy Chairman for conducting protests within the Parliament.[3][4]
Three years later, in 2023, Singh was suspended from the Rajya Sabha yet again for the entirety of the monsoon session by Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar after he protested against the BJP-led central government for introducing a bill to pave the way for its paramountcy over the elected government in Delhi on matters related to administration of services in the state, and for demanding that Prime Minister Narendra Modi break his prolonged silence on the ethnic conflict marring Manipur and issue a statement.[5]
Singh raised concerns related to, inter alia, child deaths, child trafficking, stringent punishments for sexual abuse of children in the Parliament of India. He was felicitated with the PGC Award by UNICEF India in 2020 for his efforts.[6]
Singh was nominated for another tenure as a Member of Parliament in the Rajya Sabha in January 2024.[7]
Cases
editIn 2016, he accused Bikram Singh Majithia, the then Revenue Minister for Punjab, for being a "drug dealer".[8] In turn, Majithia filed a defamation suit against him, Arvind Kejriwal and Ashish Khetan.[9] Later, AAP president Arvind Kejriwal apologised to Majithia for his party's slander against him.[10] As of 2022, Singh admitted in the court that he stands by his statement.[8]
During the heyday of the Rafale deal controversy, wherein grave charges were levelled against the BJP government stemming from alleged financial and procedural irregularities in the procurement of combat jets for the Indian Air Force, Sanjay Singh received a notice from an Ahmedabad civil court in the state of Gujarat owing to a defamation suit lodged by Anil Ambani and several of his companies, primarily Reliance Defence Limited.[11] Anil Ambani, an industrialist and the younger brother of Mukesh Ambani, enjoys close ties to the ruling regime of India.[12]
In 2017, Singh was assaulted by a woman worker of the AAP.[13]
In January 2023, a special court in Sultanpur of Uttar Pradesh convicted him and sentenced him to three months in prison for protesting against frequent power cuts in Sultanpur in 2001. He is currently out on bail.[14] The Allahabad High Court, however, stayed the sentence in August 2024, observing that the judgments of both the trial court and the sessions court (which upheld the verdict) are "perverse". The High Court further stated that a prima facie examination of the verdicts of the two lower courts seem to be missing the ingredients of sections 143 and 391 of the Indian Penal Code, provisions under which Singh was charged.[15]
Delhi liquor excise policy case
editIn February 2021, the AAP government in Delhi introduced a bill to allow the cessation of state government involvement in the sale of liquor, paving the way for the issuance of licensing to private enterprises. The government stated that divesting the state from involvement in the sale of liquor was necessary to ensure it fulfilled its mandate as a regulatory and taxation authority; furthermore, it stated that privatisation was necessary to bolster competition in a domain previously the sole monopoly of the government: competitive bidding for liquor vending zones by private enterprises would bolster revenue while concurrently encouraging competition, thereby tending to consumer welfare.
The ratification of this policy triggered a raft of allegations from the Indian National Congress and the BJP, the principal political adversaries of the Aam Aadmi Party, which alleged "corruption" in its implementation. Singh was named as an accomplice in the chargesheet filed by the Enforcement Directorate (ED), an agency tasked with combating financial crimes under the jurisdiction of the central government led by the BJP, before the Rouse Avenue district court in New Delhi.[16] The BJP-led central government has been the subject of severe criticism for misusing central investigative agencies to harass members of the opposition, particularly the Aam Aadmi Party. Since the introduction of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA), the principal legislative instrument empowering the ED to combat financial crime, the conviction rate as a proportion of total cases registered by it stands at an abysmal 0.65%.[17]
In October 2023, he was arrested by the ED in connection with the alleged irregularities and was held in Tihar Jail until he was granted bail in April 2024.[18]
Singh’s pre-trial detention, without the ED furnishing any prima facie evidence or credible proof indicating his involvement in the alleged irregularities, has triggered severe criticism owing to Section 24 of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act governing bail. The provision effectively flips the presumption of innocence by placing the burden on the accused to satisfy the court of their innocence in order to be considered for bail. This broader inversion of criminal procedure is further reinforced by Section 45, under which stringent bail conditions were initially struck down by the Supreme Court of India as unconstitutional, only to be effectively reinstated through successive amendments introduced by the BJP-led central government. These changes were enacted as money bills, thereby bypassing the upper house of the Parliament of India to avoid parliamentary scrutiny.[19]
Acquittal
editIn February 2026, the Rouse Avenue district court acquitted Sanjay Singh of all charges, stating that there was "no overarching conspiracy or criminal intent in the excise policy". The presiding magistrate also rapped the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) conducting a botched probe and recommended a departmental enquiry against the officials who oversaw the investigation. The court further stated the CBI failed to produce any evidence indicating implication in the alleged irregularities, and that its probe failed to attain even the threshold necessary for suspicion.[20][21][22]
Election History
editRajya Sabha
edit| Position | Party | Constituency | From | To | Tenure | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha (1st Term) |
AAP | N.C.T. Delhi | 28 January 2018 |
27 January 2024 |
5 years, 364 days | |
| Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha (2nd Term) |
28 January 2024 |
27 January 2030 |
2 years, 161 days | |||
See also
editReferences
edit- ↑ "AAP appoints Sanjay Singh in-charge for Delhi assembly polls, Pankaj Gupta is campaign director". The Indian Express. 26 September 2019. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- ↑ "Rajya Sabha: AAP makes an entry into Rajya Sabha with three MPS | India News - Times of India". The Times of India. 8 January 2018.
- ↑ "Derek O'Brien, 7 other Opposition MPS suspended over Rajya Sabha ruckus on farm bills". 21 September 2020.
- ↑ "Motion seeking suspension of MPS, who intimidated deputy chair Harivansh, likely in Rajya Sabha tomorrow".
- ↑ "AAP MP Sanjay Singh suspended from Rajya Sabha for entire monsoon session". mint. 24 July 2023. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
- ↑ "9 MPs receive awards for their role in Parliament in advancing child rights: UNICEF".
- ↑ "Jailed AAP leader Sanjay Singh takes oath as Rajya Sabha MP for 2nd term". The Indian Express. 19 March 2024. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
- 1 2 "Defamation case: AAP MP Sanjay Singh says he stands by statement against Majithia". The Indian Express. 1 November 2022. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
- ↑ "Majithia files defamation suit against Kejriwal, two others".
- ↑ "Kejriwal Apologises to Bikram Majithia as Defamation Cases Take a Toll on AAP, Arun Jaitley Next?". 15 March 2018.
- ↑ "AAP leader Sanjay Singh receives court notice in a defamation case over his allegations in Rafale deal". The Indian Express. 17 October 2018. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
- ↑ Unnithan, Sandeep (3 November 2025). "From the India Today archives 2018 | Rafale deal: An Anil Ambani connection?". India Today. Retrieved 26 April 2026.
- ↑ "AAP's Sanjay Singh Slapped By Woman Party Worker During Roadshow". NDTV.com. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
- ↑ "AAP MP Sanjay Singh Gets 3 Months In Jail Over 2001 Protest In UP Town". NDTV.com. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
- ↑ "HC stays 3-month jail sentence to AAP MP Sanjay Singh". The Times of India. 22 August 2024. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 26 April 2026.
- ↑ "AAP's Sisodia and Sanjay Singh, KCR daughter named in ED chargesheet in liquor policy case". The Indian Express. 21 December 2022. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
- ↑ "In Numbers: How BJP Deploys Central Agencies Like the Enforcement Directorate During Elections". The Wire. Retrieved 26 April 2026.
- ↑ "AAP MP Sanjay Singh walks out of jail, says time to give a reply to BJP". The Tribune. 5 October 2023. Retrieved 3 April 2024.
- ↑ Mittal, Akshat (29 January 2026). "Extraordinary Powers, Ordinary Rights: ED–Mamata Banerjee Tussle and the Deeper Crisis in PMLA Law". www.livelaw.in. Retrieved 26 April 2026.
- ↑ "Arvind Kejriwal: Indian court closes corruption case against former Delhi chief minister". www.bbc.com. 27 February 2026. Retrieved 26 April 2026.
- ↑ Thapliyal, Nupur (27 February 2026). "Delhi Court Raps CBI For Repeatedly Using 'South Group' Phrase In Liquor Policy Case, Says Region-Based Labelling Arbitrary". Archived from the original on 27 February 2026. Retrieved 26 April 2026.
- ↑ Thapliyal, Nupur (27 February 2026). "No Evidence Of Bribe Or Quid Pro Quo By Arvind Kejriwal: Delhi Court In Excise Police Case". Archived from the original on 27 February 2026. Retrieved 26 April 2026.