Updated May 5th, 2019 at 16:41 IST

Pragya Thakur donning saffron robes doesn't make her 'sadhvi': Chhattisgarh CM

Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel claimed on Sunday, May 5 that Pragya Singh Thakur used to ride motorcycle wearing jeans and T-shirt and cannot be called a 'sadhvi' because she now dons saffron robes

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Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel claimed on Sunday, May 5 that Pragya Singh Thakur used to ride motorcycle wearing jeans and T-shirt and cannot be called a 'sadhvi' because she now dons saffron robes.

The Congress leader also alleged that the BJP's Bhopal Lok Sabha seat candidate, an accused in the 2008 Malegan blast case and currently out on bail, was a "habitual criminal" who had stabbed a man and attacked many people with "slipper".

READ: Bhopal District Election Officer Issues Notice To BJP Candidate Sadhvi Pragya Thakur Over Violation Of Model Code Of Conduct. Details Here

The BJP reacted sharply to Baghel's remarks, dubbing them as "shameful and baseless".

Baghel told reporters, "She wore T-shirt and jeans and used to ride a motorcycle when she stayed with her brother-in-law at Bilaigarh (in Balodabazar district) in Chhattisgarh." 

"She dealt many people with slipper. She stabbed a man in his chest...the entire Bilaigarh knows. Her behaviour had been like that of a habitual criminal," he said.

"Later on, she switched over to saffron robes. This does not mean that she is a sadhu (ascetic or holy woman)," he claimed.

Baghel, however, parried questions on the status of the stabbing case allegedly involving Thakur.

When contacted, Madhya Pradesh BJP spokesman Hitesh Bajpai said Baghel's comments against Thakur were "shameful and baseless".

WATCH: Here's What Sadhvi Pragya Has To Say About Shiv Sena's Burqa Ban Demand To The Modi Government

"This is unbecoming of a chief minister," he said, alleging that Baghel was speaking "total lies".

Baghel had last week also claimed that Thakur stabbed a man in 2001.

Thakur is locked in a battle with Congress veteran Digvijay Singh in the Bhopal Lok Sabha seat, which will go to polls on May 12.

Six people were killed and over 100 injured in a bomb blast at Malegaon, a communally sensitive textile town in north Maharashtra's Nashik district, on September 29, 2008.

The Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad arrested Thakur and some others in the case, alleging they were part of a Hindu extremist group which carried out the blast.

The National Investigation Agency later gave Thakur a clean chit, but the trial court in Mumbai did not discharge her.

She is facing trial under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act and Indian Penal Code.

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Published May 5th, 2019 at 16:41 IST