Janjivan Bureau / Bengaluru : Karnataka’s Siddaramaiah govenment targeting to win the assembly election 2018 on the name of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. Indira’s grandson and congress vice president Rahul Gandhi inaugurated 101 Indira canteens in Bengaluru on Wednesday while another 97 will flash their menu cards on Gandhi Jayanti. That will make it one canteen each in every one of the city’s 198 municipal ward.
The Karnataka government’s ambitious Indira Canteens, which will offer breakfast for Rs. 5 and dinner for Rs. 10. On opening day, lunch and dinner will be free for all.
August 15 was the deadline to set up 198 canteens in all wards, but several controversies delayed the project. Only 101 canteens start services today.
Mr. Gandhi said that Indira Canteens were aimed at the poor, the migrants, who come to Bengaluru with a dream to build something. “No person in Bengaluru should ever go hungry and the canteens are a great means towards it,” he said, asking the government to give much attention to cleanliness and taste.
Chief Minister Siddaramaiah said that Indira Canteens was a continuation of Congress’s commitment to a hunger-free Karnataka. “We started Anna Bhagya scheme by giving 7 kg of rice free to over 4 crore people the very day we came to power. To its credit, the scheme is stemming mass migration from our villages despite severe drought in the last three years. Not a single hunger related death has been reported in the State despite severe drought. Indira Canteens is only a continuation of that programme,” he said.
Siddaramaiah announced that the programme will be extended to all district centres across the state. Coming down heavily on those against the programme, he said only those who knew hunger would know it’s pain and opposition by the rich and those who do not understand hunger was irrelevant. “Those who oppose the programme are anti-poor and anti-downtrodden,” he said.
Responding to criticism on naming the canteens after Indira Gandhi, Mr. Siddaramaiah said that the canteens were aptly named after the leader who gave a rousing call to the nation in 1971 to eradicate poverty: “garibi hathao.” That was her response to her opponents calling for “Indira hathao.” Our response to our opponents is also similar.
He also came down heavily on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and said demonetisation had failed to help the poor. “From the past three years it’s only his Mann ki baat that’s going on. Our’s is vangibaat for the poor,” the chief minister said.