New Delhi: The Congress hit out Friday at the Centre over the alleged rise in unemployment and poverty. The Congress demanded that solutions must be provided for the problems being faced by the youth. Former Congress president Rahul Gandhi attacked the government over a media report. The report had claimed that unemployment rate has gone up in August as rural jobs dipped.
Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra also slammed the government over the alleged rise in unemployment and privatisation. She raised the issue of ‘Staff Selection Commission Combined Graduate Level Exams’ allegedly being in a state of limbo.
“2017- No appointments till now under SSC CGL. 2018 – Even results are not out of the CGL exam. 2019 – CGL exam was not held. 2020 SSC CGL – No vacancies taken out,” Priyanka Gandhi said in a tweet in Hindi. If vacancies come out, then no exams. If exams take place, then no results (sic). If results come out, then no recruitment,” Priyanka added.
“The future of the youth is being ruined by private sector layoffs and a halt on government recruitment, but the government is serving lies in advertisements and speeches to hide the truth,” she said in another tweet with the hashtag ‘stop privatisation’.
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In a seprate development, Rahul appealed to the Narendra Modi government for ‘employment, reinstatement, results of exams’ in a Hindi tweet. “Provide solutions to the problems being faced by the youth of the country,” Rahul tweeted.
Meanwhile, Congress’s chief spokesperson Randeep Surjewala attacked the government over alleged rise in poverty. He cited growth and poverty figures from the UPA era to hit out at the current dispensation.
Citing a UN report, he said it shows a rapid rise in poverty among women. Surjewala also claimed that according to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), 40 crore Indians are being pushed below the poverty line.
The Congress has stepped up its attack on the government after India’s economy suffered its worst slump on record in April-June. In this period the gross domestic product (GDP) contracted by 23.9 per cent as the coronavirus-related lockdowns weighed on the already-declining consumer demand and investment.