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I am a member of 'Tukde Tukde' gang, says Chidambaram; calls Centre ‘no data govt’

Questions govt over steps taken for the welfare of the common people

43-PChidambaram (File) P Chidambaram | Sanjay Ahlawat

“This is a no data available government,” said former finance minister P. Chidambaram in Rajya Sabha on Tuesday over the ruling dispensation’s “failure” to have the record on oxygen shortage deaths, corpses floating in rivers and migrants walking back home during the coronavirus-induced lockdown.

Initiating a discussion on the Union budget 2022-23, Chidambaram said unemployment is on the rise in the country and questioned the Centre over the steps taken for the welfare of the common people following reduced subsidies for petroleum, fertiliser, food, among others.

"Welfare has been thrown to the wind for 142 billionaires of this country,” he said.

Chidambaram spoke immediately after Prime Minister Narendra Modi's reply to the debate on the Motion of Thanks to the President's address.

He said he was speaking eloquently about jobs and employment, and as on March 31, 2021, there were 8.72 lakh vacancies in the central government and the government made 78,264 recruitments, leaving nearly 8 lakh vacancies.

"This is the statistic I hope the prime minister will welcome and use in his next speech," he said.

On Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s budget speech, Chidambaram sarcastically said, “The thing I liked about the finance minister’s budget speech is that it was the shortest speech of 90 minutes.”

“I will also keep my reply very short," he said.

"I am a member of the 'Tukde Tukde' gang, which means ‘disruption’. I am worried because in this parliament, a question was asked ‘who are members of Tukde Tukde gang?’ and the honourable minister said ‘we have no data available on Tukde Tukde gang’."

“No data is also available on oxygen shortage death, corpses floating in rivers, migrants walking back to their homes and doubling farmers income, which was supposed to happen in 2022. This is a ‘no data available government’...," Chidambaram said.

"But I have some data and want the House to look into it. Last year, the finance minister projected the 2021-22 fiscal deficit as 6.8 per cent. I had cautioned them and said it will not be contained at 6.8 per cent and said we would do better than it," he said, adding "they have done better than 6.8 per cent and they have done 6.9 per cent".

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