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Mumbai: Unfazed by all-round criticism for blackening Sudheendra Kulkarni's face for his refusal to cancel Pakistan's former foreign minister Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri's book launch, Shiv Sena on Tuesday likened the ORF chief to 26/11 terrorist Ajmal Kasab.
The Sena, a junior partner in the BJP-led governments in Maharashtra and at the Centre, also locked horns with Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis for criticising it, saying he had "failed to understand Maharashtra" and that his condemnation of the incident brought the state "a bad name".
Continuing with its shrill anti-Pakistan stance, a dayafter the paint attack on Kulkarni triggered outrage, Shiv Sena said India faced greater threat from people like the Observer Research Foundation chairman than extremists and terrorists.
"The real threat to the sovereignty of our nation is not due to extremists or terrorists, but people like Kulkarni. People like him are out to cut the neck of our nation.. When there are people like him present here, Pakistan does not need to send people like Kasab for terrorist activities," the Sena said in an editorial in party mouthpiece 'Saamana'.
"An atmosphere has been created where it now seems that Khurshid Kasuri is a messenger of peace or a Mahatma and the Sena has committed a crime by opposing him. However much we are criticised and maligned, we will not change our stand against Pakistan," it said.
Having defiantly gone ahead with the launch of Kasuri's book 'Neither a Hawk nor a Dove: An Insider's Account of Pakistan's Foreign Policy' despite the unseemly incident, Kulkarni today made a pitch for freedom of expression. "I have been labelled a Pakistani agent in Sena mouthpiece 'Saamana'. I respect their freedom of expression. They should also respect others' freedom of expression," Kulkarni told a press conference.
"When it is said I am a Pakistani agent, I say yes, I am an agent but an agent of peace and will continue to be one," he said. The Sena, whose relations with senior partner BJP has been under strain for quite some time now, also assailed Fadnavis over his criticism of its attack on Kulkarni.
"The CM says that our state has got a bad name due to our agitation against Khurshid Kasuri. This shows that he failed to understand Maharashtra. His statement and his support (to Kasuri) has actually brought us a bad name," Sena MP Sanjay Raut told a press conference.
Meanwhile, six Shiv Sena activists who had been arrested on Monday for blackening Kulkarni's face, on Tuesday met party chief Uddhav Thackeray at 'Matoshree', his Bandra residence.
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