Using the analogy of surgical strikes, Prime Minister Narendra Modi wondered what would have happened if the government had adopted similar strategy in the recent campaign against black money, which saw declaration worth Rs. 65,000 crore.
“We gave some time to those who had generated black money (to declare it). You will be happy to know that Rs. 65,000 crore in black money came into mainstream with payment of tax and penalty.
“Now think, Rs. 36,000 crore that was leaking has been stopped [by direct benefit transfer], and Rs. 65,000 crore of black money is unearthed, together it is Rs one lakh crore.
“And this Rs 1 lakh crore has been brought back without launching surgical strikes,” Mr. Modi said, invoking the term used for the recent operation by the Army against terror launch pads in Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir. “If we do surgical strikes [in this area], you can imagine what all will come out,” the Prime Minister said.
Mr. Modi said he had put up a sustained fight against corruption since he took charge. “Against corruption, without much publicity I have put up a sustained fight. Government’s assistance [now] goes directly in the bank accounts of beneficiaries, cutting out middlemen.
Just by ensuring that the right person gets the benefit and wrong person cannot take it, we have saved Rs 36,000 crore, which used to leak in the form of (subsidies for) gas cylinders, scholarship, pension,”he said.
Mr. Modi, speaking at a camp to distribute ‘assistive devices’ to over 8,000 ‘Divyangs’ or differently-abled persons here, also criticised past governments for not doing enough for the disabled.
After distributing the aid devices, the Prime Minister said, “Knowingly or unknowingly, this country has remained insensitive towards the Divyangs. The government buildings only had facility for healthy persons.
We launched Sugamya Bharat mission, so that government buildings, hospitals, platforms are built in such a way that they have access facility for the Divyangs.”