Opposition action akin to ‘distraction’ by Pak. to facilitate infiltration: PM

December 22, 2016 01:34 pm | Updated December 04, 2021 11:58 pm IST - Varanasi

Modi felicitates the beneficiaries of different Govt Schemes at Varanasi, U.P.

Modi felicitates the beneficiaries of different Govt Schemes at Varanasi, U.P.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday said the disruption of Parliament on demonetisation by Opposition parties was similar to the ‘distraction’ of Indian soldiers caused by Pakistani shelling along the border in their bid to let terrorists infiltrate into India.

In a similar fashion, he said, the Opposition parties were devising “new tactics” to “help the corrupt.” “When Pakistan wants to send infiltrators into India, it starts firing on the border. That keeps our Army occupied and the infiltrators manage to sneak in under the cover...These days you must have seen the ‘tu-tu main-main’ [arguments] in Parliament. Now I know who is really benefiting from the disruptions,” Mr. Modi said at a function at the Banaras Hindu University Varanasi, his Lok Sabha constituency.

This is Mr. Modi’s first visit to Varanasi after demonetisation on November 8.

In a counter-attack on the Opposition for their argument that the government had failed to assess the magnitude of distress caused by demonetisation, Mr. Modi, in a mocking tone, said though he had an idea of demonetisation he had no clue of the support the “dishonest” would get from his political opponents after its implementation. “I had an assessment of many things. But I had never calculated that some politicians and political parties would stand beside the corrupt and the dishonest,” he said.

In a speech laced with sarcasm and taunts, Mr. Modi took a dig at top Congress leaders, party vice-president Rahul Gandhi, former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and former Finance Minister P. Chidambaram, saying in opposing him "some leaders had lost their balance."

He especially ridiculed Mr. Gandhi for his ''oratory and political skills'', and made a sarcastic reference to his threat of causing a tremor by make revelations about the Prime Minister’s alleged involvement in corruption.

 

Mr. Modi said that since the Nehru-Gandhi scion “started speaking and learnt to deliver speeches,” there was “no end to his happiness.”

Back in 2009, there was no way of figuring out what Mr. Gandhi had in store. But today all was clear. “We did not know what was inside the packet then. Now we are coming to know,” the Prime Minister said, triggering laughter from the crowd.

In a reference to Mr. Gandhi’s “earthquake” threat, Mr. Modi said had he not spoken, the country would have to live through a terrible earthquake. “It would take us 10 years to recover. Thank god, he started speaking. Now we know there is no danger of a tremor,” Mr. Modi said. “If black money is being exposed on one hand, black minds are being exposed too.”

Mr. Modi termed Mr. Gandhi a “youth leader who is learning to give speeches." Mr. Gandhi's argument that since 60 per cent of the people were illiterate online banking would not be practical was an indictment of the Congress regimes of the past.“Did I make the people illiterate through some magic trick? Who kept them illiterate,” Mr. Modi asked.

 

IMr. Modi criticised Dr. Singh for his speech in Parliament against cashless economy on the premise of rampant poverty afflicting “50 per cent of the population,” in the country. He said it amounted to Dr. Singh’s own admission of failure to remove poverty. “Is this his own report card? Country’s poor... whose legacy is this? You are the former Prime Minister and we take you seriously. But you are giving your report card and I am glad about that. Few people know he has been involved in the core economic planning of the country since 1970-72.” 

Taking on Mr. Chidambaram for his remark that since 50 per cent of villages in the country did not have electric supply, cashless economy was not possible, Mr. Modi said, “Did I uproot the electric polls and wires?”

The Prime Minister was speaking at the foundation stone laying ceremony of the Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya Cancer Centre. The project would cost Rs. 600 crore.

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