BJP slaps ₹100 crore defamation notice on Omar Abdullah over MLA bribery claims
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Jammu and Kashmir unit of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has served a ₹100 crore defamation notice on Chief Minister Omar Abdullah over his public allegation that the party was offering ₹20–30 crore to National Conference MLAs to engineer the collapse of his government. The notice, issued through Advocate Parimoksh Seth on the instructions of J&K BJP president and Rajya Sabha member Sat Paul Sharma, demands an unconditional public apology and withdrawal of the remarks within seven days.
What Omar Abdullah Alleged
At his party convention on 11 July 2025, held to observe the 26th death anniversary of his grandmother Begum Akbar Jahan — popularly known as 'Madr-e-Meherbaan' (Benevolent Mother) — Abdullah claimed that a senior BJP leader had approached a National Conference MLA from the Jammu division. According to Abdullah, the offer included ₹20–30 crore in cash, a ministerial berth, and an assurance of restoring Jammu and Kashmir's statehood in exchange for defection to the BJP. He further alleged that a senior BJP functionary who also practices as a Supreme Court advocate was involved in making these overtures.
BJP's Response and Legal Warning
The BJP categorically rejected the allegations, describing them as 'false, baseless, malicious and defamatory' and asserting they were made without evidence with the intent to damage the party's credibility and public image. The defamation notice calls on Abdullah to withdraw the allegations in writing, issue an unconditional public apology within the stipulated period, and refrain from repeating such statements in the future.
Should the Chief Minister fail to comply, the BJP has warned it will initiate both civil and criminal proceedings — including a civil defamation suit seeking ₹100 crore in damages and criminal action under relevant provisions of law. The notice explicitly states it has been issued without prejudice to any other legal remedies available to the party.
Political Context and Stakes
The exchange marks a sharp escalation in the already fraught relationship between the ruling National Conference (NC) government in J&K and the BJP, which is in opposition at the territorial level while governing at the Centre. Abdullah's government, formed after the 2024 J&K Assembly elections — the first in the Union Territory since the abrogation of Article 370 — has held a slim but functional majority. Allegations of horse-trading, if substantiated, would carry serious constitutional implications for the government's survival.
Notably, the statehood promise cited in Abdullah's allegation touches a particularly sensitive nerve: restoring J&K's statehood status remains an unresolved political commitment made by the Centre following the 2019 reorganisation. Its use as an alleged inducement, if true, would represent a significant political controversy.
What Happens Next
Abdullah has a seven-day window from the date of the notice to respond. Legal observers note that defamation proceedings in India — both civil and criminal — can be protracted, and the political optics of such a suit may matter as much as its legal outcome. The BJP has consistently maintained that the allegations are politically motivated, and the legal route signals the party intends to contest them on the record.