Mumbai / New Delhi:
Actress Kangana Ranaut, locked in a bitter dispute with the ruler Shiv Sena of Maharashtra, left Mumbai this morning saying she was doing so with a “heavy heart” after being “terrified” with attempts to demolish his office. “I must say my PoK analogy was great,” said the actor.
“With heavy heart leaving Mumbai, the way I was terrorized all these days, constant attacks and abuse thrown at me, attempts to break into my house after my workplace, alert security with lethal weapons around me , I have to say my analogy on POK was explosive. (sic), “he tweeted as he headed to the airport.
After landing in Chandigarh to return to Himachal Pradesh, she tweeted that her security had been significantly reduced and people were greeting her with joy. “It seems that this time I was saved. There was a moment when I felt the touch of a mother in Mumbai, but today the situation is such that I am lucky to be alive. The moment Shiv Sena became Sonia Sena, the Mumbai administration turned into terror, “he published in Hindi, addressed to the Sena and to the President of Congress, Sonia Gandhi.
Kangana Ranaut, who currently resides in his hometown of Manali, arrived in Mumbai last Wednesday amid massive media attention and a dramatic confrontation with the Shiv Sena when the Mumbai civic body began to demolish what it called illegal disruptions to your office in town.
The “Queen” actor said that the demolition, stopped by order of the Bombay High Court, was Shiv Sena’s way of targeting it; Kangana Ranaut’s comments criticizing the Mumbai police and the Maharashtra government over the Sushant Singh Rajput case triggered a war of words that escalated when she compared Mumbai to PoK (Pakistani Occupied Kashmir) and said she felt unsafe in the city.
In her five days in Mumbai, the 33-year-old actress met with the Governor of Maharashtra, Bhagat Singh Koshyari, and also with the Union Minister, Ramdas Athwale, to demand action and compensation for the demolition.
He also declared that he would not renovate the building and would work from its ruins as a “symbol of the will of a woman who dared to rise up in this world.”
.