Ghaziabad:
Delhi Chief Minister
Arvind Kejriwal was taken to hospital with high fever and acute bronchitis, just hours after he ended a demonstration in the capital that saw him sleeping on the road on a cold Monday night, bundled up in a blanket next to his blue Wagon-R.
He was later discharged after medical tests. Mr Kejriwal, 45, ended his sit-in last evening.
His protest demanded the suspension of five police officers for alleged inaction. Two of them were asked to go on leave. Critics of Mr Kejriwal say that's hardly the "victory" that he professed last night when announcing the end of what he had threatened as "an indefinite protest."
(Victory for AAP or wrong precedent: special analysis) Along with other leaders of his Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), the former tax inspector has also asked for the control of the Delhi Police to be shifted to the state government. It currently reports to the union government via the Home Ministry.
(Kejriwal accepts Centre's compromise to end protest: 10 developments)
Mr Kejriwal, a diabetes patient, was given insulin shots by his doctors at the venue of his protest, which lasted over 30 hours in one of the country's most high-security zones, housing parliament and several ministries.