This image was posted on Twitter by Farah Khan Ali
New Delhi:
A series of jaw-dropping tweets nearly allowed Farah Khan Ali to upstage Salman Khan on the day the superstar was sentenced to five years in jail for driving drunk and killing a homeless man in 2002. (Also Read - With 'Friends' Like These: Pro-Salman Tweets That Triggered Outrage)
On Friday, the 45-year-old jewelry designer and daughter of actor Sanjay Khan offered "an unconditional apology" for her earlier tweets - and then proceeded to offer more astounding views on the homeless. Like this one:
While she continues to provoke a torrent of criticism on Twitter, she is also now named in a police case. A court in Muzaffarpur, Bihar, ordered a First Information Report or FIR to be registered against Ms Ali and singer Abhijeet for their tweets on the day Salman Khan was convicted. The court directed that the FIR be lodged under offences that include the intent to cause a riot.
In her tweets on Wednesay, Ms Ali had suggested that people should not be sleeping on pavements and that convicting Salman was like 'penalising a train driver because someone decided to cross the tracks and got killed in the bargain.'
On Friday, the 45-year-old jewelry designer and daughter of actor Sanjay Khan offered "an unconditional apology" for her earlier tweets - and then proceeded to offer more astounding views on the homeless. Like this one:
And maybe we need to earmark roads where the homeless can sleep peacefully without the fear of being run over, roads that are bylanes
Farah Khan (@FarahKhanAli) May 8, 2015
While she continues to provoke a torrent of criticism on Twitter, she is also now named in a police case. A court in Muzaffarpur, Bihar, ordered a First Information Report or FIR to be registered against Ms Ali and singer Abhijeet for their tweets on the day Salman Khan was convicted. The court directed that the FIR be lodged under offences that include the intent to cause a riot.
In her tweets on Wednesay, Ms Ali had suggested that people should not be sleeping on pavements and that convicting Salman was like 'penalising a train driver because someone decided to cross the tracks and got killed in the bargain.'