When Your Own Manifesto Becomes "Anti-National": The Sonam Wangchuk Comedy
So, our beloved government has finally cracked the code to national security – arrest the guy who's literally asking for what you promised in your own manifesto!
Meet Sonam Wangchuk, Ladakh's poster boy for peaceful activism, who committed the heinous crime of... checks notes... demanding exactly what the BJP manifesto promised in 2019. You know, tiny things like 6th Schedule inclusion, statehood for Ladakh, and those pesky job reservations. Basically, he took their election pamphlet seriously. Rookie mistake!
The government's logic is flawless: Promise something → Get votes → Call the same demand "anti-national" → Arrest the demander. It's like ordering pizza and then calling the delivery boy a burglar for showing up at your door.
Sonam Wangchuk was on a 15-day hunger strike (because apparently, starving yourself is now a national security threat) when some frustrated youth decided to redecorate the BJP office in Leh. But here's the kicker – they carefully preserved the Indian flag while burning down the party office. That's more respect for national symbols than most politicians show!
The Ministry of Home Affairs swiftly cancelled his NGO's FCRA licence because nothing says "development" like cutting off educational funding. They've charged him under the National Security Act and shipped him off to Jodhpur jail. Because heaven forbid someone in Ladakh actually remembers election promises!
Meanwhile, Wangchuk – the same guy who invented solar tents for our soldiers and championed "Boycott Chinese Products" – is now being called a Chinese agent. The irony is thicker than Delhi's smog during Diwali.
The best part? His wife says their house was "ransacked" while he was treated "like a criminal". But don't worry, folks – this is all for national security. Because apparently, asking for constitutional rights is scarier than actual border tensions.














