In front of the UP polls, Seema Kushwaha, a senior Supreme Court legal advisor who battled for equity for the casualties in the 2012 Nirbhaya and the 2020 Hathras assault and murder cases, joined the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) in Lucknow on Thursday.
BSP public general secretary Satish Chandra Mishra was available on the event. Afterward, Seema Kushwaha met BSP boss Mayawati at her home in the state capital.
Senior Supreme Court legal advisor Seema Kushwaha said she is joining the BSP as she is enlivened by the standards and arrangements of extraordinary Dalit characters just as Mayawati.
She said she will keep on battling for the equity for the more fragile segments of the general public.
“The BSP boss has been battling for the freedoms of the Dalits, the denied and the regressive classes. During her four terms as the central pastor of Uttar Pradesh, she had worked for the improvement of the state and the government assistance of the more vulnerable segments,” Seema Kushwaha said.
“At the point when Mayawati was in power, the rule of law in Uttar Pradesh was great. The life and property of the commoners was secured in the state. During her residency, the state saw decrease in wrongdoing. We will attempt to make Mayawati the central priest of Uttar Pradesh for the fifth term to guarantee that law and order is reestablished in UP and young ladies and ladies have a solid sense of reassurance,” Kushwaha said.
Kushwaha is likewise the originator of the Nirbhaya Jyoti Trust and has sent off a mission to guarantee equity for the survivors of assault.
The Nirbhaya assault case had shaken the country in 2012 when a 23-year-old paramedic understudy, alluded to as Nirbhaya, was ruthlessly assaulted and attacked by six men on a moving transport in Delhi in December 2012 and was tossed out and about. She surrendered to her wounds at a Singapore medical clinic on December 29, 2012. It took north of seven years to convey equity to the person in question. The four convicts in the Nirbhaya case were hanged to death in Delhi’s Tihar prison on March 20, 2020, after a three-judge Supreme Court seat dismissed the last request by the convicts’ attorney.