Delhi Police confirmed that AAP members surrounded taxi carrying the African women.

NB - If these reports are correct the Delhi unit and cadres of the AAP are on a dangerous path. They are not entitled to manhandle people and to take the law into their own hands. They are not a substitute for the police. Law abiding citizens are not willing to see political workers turning into vigilantes. 

A senior AAP leader has warned against goondaismThe sooner he & the Chief Minister take steps to check this trend the better it will be for them and for their party - DS 

‘They held us in taxi for 3 hrs, took urine samples, said black people break laws’


Two of the four African women who were taken to a hospital for tests after Delhi Law Minister Somnath Bharti harangued the police on Wednesday night, said they  were held captive inside a taxi for over three hours, and that doctors probed their private parts.
The women said that some men surrounded their car and did not let them get out. They were then forcibly taken to the hospital for a medical examination, they claimed. They returned home only around 9 on Thursday morning.
Delhi Police ACP B S Jakhar confirmed that Bharti and other AAP members had surrounded a taxi carrying the African women. “We were returning from a party, when our taxi was stopped by a few men. They started shouting at us, calling us names. The police were in fact supporting us. They held us captive inside the car for over three hours,” one of the women told The Indian Express.
“The men hit us,” she said, pointing to bruises on her face. According to the women, the men then took them to a hospital. Some police personnel accompanied them, the women said.
“We asked the men where they are taking us. They said we would have to undergo a medical examination to check if we had consumed drugs. We were taken to the hospital and a series of tests were conducted,” she claimed.
Urine samples were taken and their private parts also probed, she said. “They took our urine samples, put some machines on our body and also cavity searched us. We felt humiliated. We kept telling them that we have not consumed drugs. They then asked for a blood sample which we refused to give,” she said.
The women claimed they were then taken to the police station. “We were taken to the police station and kept there for over four hours. We returned home only in the morning around 9. The police was, however, very helpful and asked us not to panic. But those other men were after our lives. They did not let us go home,” she said.
The women said they have a lot to complain and hope to get justice. “There are many Indian people living in Africa but we never ill-treat them the way they have treated us. Some of the men told us that we are blacks and so we indulge in illegal activities. I have an export business. How can they say all this?” she asked.

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