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Home  » News » 'Har har Modi' is now 'Arhar Modi': Rahul slams BJP for price rise

'Har har Modi' is now 'Arhar Modi': Rahul slams BJP for price rise

Source: PTI
Last updated on: July 28, 2016 19:50 IST
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Calling him 'Arhar Modi', Rahul Gandhi on Thursday took swipes at Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the Lok Sabha and tore into his election promise of bringing down prices.

He also needled Modi on his election slogan asking people to make him a "chowkhidar" (watchman) and not the PM and said under his nose but there was "theft" of pulses and he was not speaking a word on it.

In a speech that lasted just a little over 15 minutes, Gandhi asked the prime minister to give a date by which the prices of pulses will come down.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who took the floor after Gandhi to make a brief intervention in the debate on the price situation in the country, hit back saying the government had inherited double-digit inflation from the United Progressive Alliance government which was hit by scams and policy paralysis.

"Any form of bluster is not substitute for statistics," he told Gandhi and claimed the government has taken steps that have led to lower inflation which would come down further with good monsoon.

Rahul, in his seventh major intervention in the House during his career, said "During elections, Modiji had said 'make me a chowkidar'. Now, there is theft of dal under the very nose of the chowkidar. But the chowkidar has not uttered a word. He is mum. ... Now he has become a big person. Leave that job of chowkidari to the Congress," Gandhi said.

Taking a jibe at the Bharatiya Janata Party slogan 'Har Har Modi' used during the Lok Sabha polls, he said "now people are saying Arhar Modi."

"You may make as many hollow promises as you want, but give us a date by when the prices of daal will come down," he said.

Listing the prices of vegetables and pulses , he said in 2014, the price of tomato was Rs 18, which has shot up to Rs 55 now. Urad and tur dal, priced at Rs 70 and 75 in February 2014, has gone up to Rs 160 and Rs 180 this month.

In a dig at the National Democratic Alliance government's second "happy birthday" celebrations, the Congress vice president said the prime minister did not even utter a single word about rising prices during this event and sought to know why he did that.

Accusing the government of waiving Rs 52,000 crore of the corporates, Gandhi asked what benefit the government has given to the farmers and housewives of the savings amounting Rs 2 lakh crore it has made from the slump in the crude prices.

He also questioned the NDA's flagship programmes like Make in India, Stand Up India and said "the 'Make in India' programme has not got given a single job to the youth."

Gandhi said the price of pulses and vegetables have gone over the roof after the NDA came to power and the farmers have not been able to get any benefit of the steep rise in the price of these commodities.

Recalling Modi's speech at a poll rally in Himachal Pradesh in February 2014, Gandhi said while attacking the then UPA government over the issue, he had said said that 'ma-bachche raat raat rote hain, aasoon pee ke sote hain' (mother and child cry the whole night and sleep drinking the tears).

"What a dialogue," Gandhi said thrice, taking a dig at Modi who was not present in the House.

"I want to remind the prime minister of the promises he made to the people of the country during the poll campaign, which Modiji does not talk about now and has forgotten. He had also promised that when the BJP government comes to power, it will bring down the prices," Gandhi said.

He said there was a gap between the minimum support price for tur dal given to the farmers was Rs 45 whereas its price in the market was Rs 75. Now, the minimum support price has risen to Rs 50, but the price of the pulses was now Rs 180.

"So, there is a gap of Rs 130 in the NDA government. Where is this Rs 100 going," Gandhi asked.

Under the Modi government, Rahul said, dal prices have risen 120 per cent.

"During the Congress government the difference between the maximum retail price and the market price was Rs 30, but today it is Rs 130," the Congress vice president said.

"People in villages are chanting a new slogan, Arhar Modi, Arhar Modi, Arhar Modi", Rahul said winding up his speech.

 

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