Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Rahul Gandhi to appear before Ahmedabad court in defamation case

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi will appear before a metropolitan magistrate's court in  Ahmedabad on Friday for the hearing of a criminal defamation suit filed against him by Ahmedabad District Cooperative Bank and its chairman Ajay Patel.

Gandhi would appear before the court, said Gujarat Congress spokesperson Manish Doshi.


"Since the summons was also issued to party's national spokesperson Randeep Singh Surjewala, he is also expected to appear tomorrow," said Doshi.

The defamation suit was filed last year after Gandhi and Surjewala claimed that the Ahmedabad District Cooperative Bank was involved in a "scam" to swap Rs 745.59 crore in swapped notes with valid currency within five days of demonetisation announcement on November 8, 2016.

Union home minister Amit Shah is one of the directors of the ADC Bank.

The court issued summonses to the two leaders on April 9 after finding prima facie evidence against them.

The complainants said that the Congress leaders leveled "false and defamatory allegations" against the bank.

The court had conducted an inquiry under section 202 of the Code of Criminal Procedure before summoning Gandhi and Surjewala.

The section deals with inquiry to decide whether there is sufficient ground for proceeding against a person.

Gandhi and Surjewala's allegations were based on the reply given by the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development to an RTI query of a Mumbai-based activist.

ADCB and Patel have denied that the bank exchanged such a huge amount of swapped currency as alleged.

More For You

starmer-social-media-ban

Bereaved parents pose with images of their children outside Downing Street on May 26, 2026 in London, England.

(Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images)

Starmer promises 'game-changer' action on social media

Highlights

  • Three options are on the table, including going further than Australia's under-16 ban.
  • Evidence suggests at least 60 per cent of Australian children have found ways around their country's ban
  • The government consultation drew 70,000 responses — the biggest since the gay marriage consultation in 2012
  • Bereaved parents who met Starmer at Downing Street urged him to target harmful platform features, not just ban access

PRIME MINISTER Sir Keir Starmer is considering going further than Australia in restricting children's access to social media, promising bereaved parents that he would unveil "game-changer" action "within weeks."

Keep ReadingShow less