New Delhi: After Bharatiya Janata Party leader and Union home minister Amit Shah claimed that the Supreme Court’s decision to grant interim bail to Delhi chief minister and Aam Aadmi Party leader Arving Kejriwal was “not a routine and normal judgment” and “many people in the country” believe that he had been given “special treatment”, the court on Thursday (May 16) reiterated that it had not made “any exception”.The bench also said that “critical analysis or even criticism of the judgment” in this regard was “welcome”. The court has granted Kejriwal interim bail to campaign for the ongoing Lok Sabha elections, and asked him to surrender himself on June 2 once polling is over.The Enforcement Directorate took objection to Kejriwal’s comment on the campaign trail that people should vote for him so that he does not have to go back to jail. The ED brought this up in court, with Solicitor General Tushar Mehta saying, “It (the statement) is a slap on the face of the institution. I take exception to it.”The bench responded, “Our order is very clear, we have fixed a timeline that on so and so date he is on bail and on the date he has to surrender (on June 2, Kejriwal will have to surrender). It is an order of the apex court, and the rule of law shall be governed by this. We did not make an exception for anybody.”The case is being heard by a bench of Justices Sanjiv Khanna and Dipankar Datta.