In 2014, in an interview with
The Times of India, on being asked on his decision of inviting Pakistani Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif and ignoring Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on the anointment ceremony of the naib imam or the imam's deputy, Ahmed Bukhari defended his position saying, "Modi claims to be the Prime Minister of 125 crore Indians but conveniently and deliberately avoids addressing Muslims. He has shown he doesn't like us. He is the one who has been maintaining distance from the community. So, I too chose to maintain my distance." A criminal case was lodged against him along with Habib-ur-Rehman and Nafisa in 2001, after an incident on 3 September 2001, when a mob, led by Bukhari assaulted on-duty police and civic agencies officials trying to remove encroachments from near CGO Complex in
Lodhi Colony. Warrants against Bukhari for this case have been issued repeatedly by the Delhi court.
Delhi Police has been unable to arrest him because of communal tension for the past ten years. In response, U.P. minister and senior
Samajwadi Party leader
Azam Khan alleged that Bukhari was accusing the Government of not giving equal rights to Muslims because he wanted his brother and son in law
Umar Ali Khan to get
Rajya Sabha Tickets. After the
Dadri Lynching Case, Bukhari alleged that
Azam Khan cannot go to the place of incident but was talking of going to
United Nations to hide his incompetence. He also called Azam 'nihayat badtameez Muslim wazeer'. Azam Khan denied the charge and accused him of being hand in glove with Hindu right wing organizations. ==References==