“NITI Aayog is not a jansabha”: West Bengal BJP President Sukanta Majumdar takes jibe at Mamata

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West Bengal BJP President Sukanta Majumdar on Sunday said that NITI aayog meeting is not a Jansabha where WB Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee can speak for unlimited time but a time is allotted to every speaker to present the issues of the state.
Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee walked out of the Niti Aayog meeting on July 27, accusing the Centre of “insulting Bengal” by interrupting her speech and making deliberate attempts to “malign the opposition.”
“Yesterday only, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sithamaram cleared it that what Mamata Banerjee said shouldn’t be said as a Chief Minister. Firstly, West Bengal had their turn a lot later but upon Mamata’s request, she was given the chance to speak early, which is a big thing in democracy but she will not accept it…It is not a jansabha. You have a specific time to say and after that allotted time you should stop but Sithraman ji cleared that no such thing had happened… It was preplanned,” Majumdar said.
Speaking on WB Congress President Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury’s letter to President Droupadi Murmu, where he alleges Bengal is in an ‘anarchic condition’, Majumdar said that the way the opposition is being attacked is not healthy for democracy.
“Today the opposition is the BJP in the state; even in place of the BJP, if there is any other opposition, they would have done the same… This is not healthy for democracy…The way opposition is being attacked and the way it creates violence is not healthy for democracy,” he said.
Chief Executive Officer of NITI Aayog, B.V.R. Subrahmanyam, dismissed Mamata Banerjee’s claim that her microphone was muted while speaking at the NITI Aayog meeting. He clarified that each Chief Minister was given a designated speaking time, which was displayed on screens at their tables, and that the time allotted to the West Bengal CM had ended.
Addressing a press conference after the NITI Aayog meeting, Subrahmanyam said that the West Bengal CM requested to speak early before lunch, and “it was accepted.”
“The Chief Minister of West Bengal requested to be given a turn before lunchtime. I’m just putting facts on the ground, no interpretations. It was a clear request from their side because normally we would have gone alphabetically, starting with Andhra Pradesh, then Arunachal Pradesh. We adjusted, and the Defence Minister called her in just before Gujarat. So, she made her statement,” he said.
“Every Chief Minister is allotted seven minutes, and there’s a clock on top of the screen that shows the remaining time. It goes from seven to six to five to four to three. At the end, it shows zero. Nothing else happened. Then she said she would have liked to speak for more time but chose not to. That was it. We all heard her points respectfully, and they will be reflected in the minutes. The Chief Secretary continued to attend the meeting even after she left to catch a flight to Calcutta,” Subrahmanyam added.
The CEO further mentioned that the Chief Ministers of ten states and Union Territories did not attend the meeting.
“We had 10 absentees and 26 participants. Absentees included Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Telangana, Bihar, Delhi, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, and Puducherry. The Chief Minister of West Bengal was present,” he said.
Nirmala Sitharaman also rejected Mamata Banerjee’s claim that her microphone was switched off while she was speaking at the NITI Aayog meeting and said that every chief minister was “allotted due time to speak”.
“CM Mamata Banerjee attended the Niti Aayog meeting. We all heard her. Every CM was given the allotted time, and that was displayed on the screen, which was present before every table. We could see that two tables have a screen before us. She said in the media that her mic was turned off. That is completely false. Every CM was given their due time to speak,” the Finance Minsiter told ANI.
Sitharaman said that it is “unfortunate” that the West Bengal CM is making such claims, adding that the government is happy that West Bengal Chief Minister attended the meeting and she said that she is speaking on behalf of the opposition, i.e. INDIA bloc.
“It’s unfortunate that the chief minister of West Bengal, Mamata Banerjee, has claimed that her mic was switched off, which is not true, and it is unfortunate because we’re happy that she participated in this meeting. She put forth her case, spoke for West Bengal and, as she said, spoke for all the opposition. But even as she was doing it and we were hearing, as per the procedure.”
Sitharaman further said that the Bengal CM should have requested for more than the allotted time but she chose to use it an excuse to walk out of the meeting.
“If she’s reminded that her time is over, even with the mic on, she could have requested that she will continue speaking like some other Chief Ministers did. But she chose to use it as an excuse so that she can get out of the meeting,” Sitharaman said.
“She should speak the truth behind this rather than again build a narrative based on falsehood,” the Finance Minister added.
Speaking to reporters, the West Bengal Chief Minister alleged “political discrimination,” stating that at the NITI Aayog meeting, she was not allowed to speak for more than five minutes, while other Chief Ministers were given more time.
“I said the central government should not discriminate against state governments. I wanted to speak, but my mic was muted. I was allowed to speak only for five minutes. People before me spoke for 10-20 minutes,” Banerjee told reporters after she stormed out of the NITI Aayog meeting today.
“I was the only one from the opposition participating, but still, I was not allowed to speak. This is insulting,” Banerjee said as she walked out of the meeting midway.
“I have come out boycotting the NITI Aayog meeting. Chandrababu Naidu was given 20 minutes to speak, Chief Ministers of Assam, Goa, and Chhattisgarh spoke for 10-12 minutes. I was stopped after just five minutes. This is unfair,” the Chief Minister said, speaking to reporters after leaving the meeting.
Claiming she participated in the meeting to strengthen “cooperative federalism,” Banerjee said, “There are many regional aspirations. That is why I am here, to share those aspirations. If a state is strong, the Union will be strong.”(ANI)



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