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Centre's proposed amendments to Electricity Act are very dangerous: Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal

Kejriwal accused the BJP-led government of benefitting a few powerful companies and not thinking about the poor while proposing amendments in the Electricity act.

Centre's proposed amendments to Electricity Act are very dangerous: Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal Image Courtesy: PTI

NEW DELHI: Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Saturday slammed the Centre government on the Electricity Act 2003, saying that the amendments proposed by the BJP-led government were 'very dangerous'.

Kejriwal accused the BJP-led government of benefitting a few powerful companies and not thinking about how it will affect the poor. 

Speaking at a press conference at his residence, Kejriwal said the amendment proposed by the Central government will make it difficult for the poor to afford electricity.

The proposed amendment will put an end to cross-subsidy, injecting a steep two-to-five times hike in the power tariff across the board, so that even the middle class, let alone the farmers and poor, would find it difficult to afford electricity.

"I will write to all the chief ministers and personally meet those from the non-BJP-ruled states against the amendments that are very dangerous and draconian. This move is aimed at benefitting the big power companies that are known to be close to the prime minister," the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) chief said.

Kejriwal said that the amendments in the act will hand over the power to the Centre, snatching it away from the state governments. 

"Forward trading will mean the big people will gamble and the common people will have to bear the entire burden of generation, speculation, supply as well as the corruption of the power companies," Kejriwal said.

The AAP will launch a movement against the amendment bill so that its passage in the Rajya Sabha could be stopped, he added.

"We will go the people, telling them that (Prime Minister Narendra) Modiji is sold to the power companies," Kejriwal said.

The Centre had sent the proposed amendments to the Electricity Act to the states for their feedback on September 7. It planned to pass the bill in the coming Winter Session of Parliament, Kejriwal told reporters.

"I am perplexed by the political rationale behind such a move that will hit a huge number of people, especially the poor and farmers. Maybe the Modi government has realised that it will not come back after the 2019 (Lok Sabha) polls and is trying to return back favours to the power companies," he claimed.

Kejriwal also challenged Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) chief Amit Shah to an "open debate" on the work done by the AAP government in three years in Delhi and the work of his party's governments in the states and the Centre.

"Amit Shah has said we have done nothing in Delhi. I want to say that we did not help Vijay Mallya and Nirav Modi flee the country, we did not make a Rafale deal. Our three years' work in the fields of education, health, power and water supply can be debated vis-a-vis his (Shah's) party's 27 years' work in Gujarat and over four years' work at the Centre," he said.

(With PTI inputs)