Uddhav Thackeray chairs first cabinet meet; assures concrete farm aid

Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray

Mumbai: Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray chaired the maiden meeting Thursday night of his cabinet which sanctioned Rs 20 crore for conservation of the Raigad Fort. He also promised concrete assistance for farmers after reviewing existing schemes instead of any piecemeal aid. Uddhav chaired the first meeting of his cabinet at Sahyadri Guest House in south Mumbai.

Later talking to reporters, Uddhav said the first decision of the cabinet was to approve a sum of Rs 20 crore for conserving the Raigad Fort, which was the capital of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj in the 17th century.

Uddhav talking to the media after the meeting said he has asked the Chief Secretary to review all existing government schemes for farmers to understand how much they have actually helped the community.

“We can paint a better picture if we know the reality. We have sought inputs. Farmers have not got anything, but only assurances. We want to provide concrete help to farmers,” said Uddhav.

“I have asked the chief secretary to provide a realistic picture about the number of schemes aimed at helping farmers and how much they have benefited them. Once I get the real picture, we will be able to come up with solution,” added Uddhav.

The CM said he is not looking at piecemeal approach to resolve issues related to cultivators, who suffered crop losses in unseasonal rains in October.

“I don’t want to provide any negligible assistance but whatever we will do, it will be a grand and satisfactory provision for the farmers,” Uddhav said. “So far farmers have been given false promises and they have not benefited actually. I have seen farmers were given certificates of loan waiver but they did not benefit in reality,” he added, hitting out at the erstwhile Devendra Fadnavis government which had announced a mega farm loan waiver in June 2017.

“We want to ensure an atmosphere in the state wherein nobody will feel terrorised,” added Uddhav.

Before the swearing-in ceremony, the three parties unveiled their common minimum programme (CMP), which will guide the three-party government.

Former CM Devendra Fadnavis expressed his disappointment over the programme. He said it does not talk about other parts of the state such as north Maharashtra and Marathwada.

Uddhav however, dismissed such apprehensions. “The cabinet is of entire Maharashtra and the person who is making such comment was chief minister for five years. A cabinet is not of a particular region, but it represents the entire state,” said Uddhav.

“He should study and tell us to which region our cabinet belongs to,” added Uddhav sarcastically.

Elaborating on the first decision taken by the cabinet related to conservation of the Raigad Fort, he said, “The total cost of the project is Rs 606 crore of which Rs 20 crore was disbursed by the previous government. I am happy the first decision in my cabinet was sanctioning (Rs 20 crore) for the second round of the ongoing work.”

At the media briefing, Uddhav was accompanied by his cabinet colleagues Chhagan Bhujbal, Jayant Patil, Nitin Raut and Balasaheb Thorat.

PTI

 

Exit mobile version