India’s main opposition leader Rahul Gandhi was restored to parliament Monday after the Supreme Court last week suspended his defamation conviction over political comments on Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Gandhi’s disqualification “has ceased to operate subject to further judicial pronouncements,” Utpal Kumar Singh, secretary general of the lower parliament house said in a statement. The 53-year-old Congress party leader was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment in March in a case that critics flagged as an effort to stifle political opposition in the world’s largest “so-called” democracy. The conviction stemmed from a remark made during the 2019 election campaign when Gandhi had asked why “all thieves have Modi as (their) common surname”. His comments were portrayed as a slur against the prime minister and against all those with the same surname, which is associated with the lower rungs of India’s caste hierarchy. Anyone sentenced to a custodial term of two years or more is ineligible to sit in India’s parliament, forcing Gandhi’s expulsion from the body in March. He was turfed out of the legislature as a result but stayed out of jail while appealing the case at the Supreme Court in New Delhi. Congress head Mallikarjun Kharge called it “a welcome step”, and called on the government to concentrate on “governance rather than denigrating democracy by targeting opposition leaders”. Fellow Congress party MP Shashi Tharoor welcomed the announcement of Gandhi’s reinstatement “with enormous relief”. “He can now resume his duties in the Lok Sabha (lower house of parliament) to serve the people of India and his constituents… A victory of justice and for our democracy,” he said. India’s top court on Friday suspended Gandhi’s defamation conviction and said that the initial trial had failed to justify imposing the maximum sentence for his campaign rally comments four years ago.