BJP’s Dilip Ghosh says Mamata Banerjee says how she can deny her responsibility



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'How can you deny your responsibility?': BJP's Dilip Ghosh confronts Mamata Banerjee

Mamata Banerjee called the blockade “poorly planned” during a video conference with PM Modi.

Calcutta

The BJP struck West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Tuesday for her comments that the blockade was “poorly planned” and said it is trying to blame the central government for “hiding its own failures.”

West Bengal BJP President Dilip Ghosh said that to “escape the COVID disaster that the minister herself has created, the health secretary became the scapegoat. She has a habit of blaming the Center for everything. This time there is no difference either. “

Mr. Ghosh stated that the situation in Bengal would have been much better today if she had followed through and imposed the blockade in a better way.

Her comments come in the context of Ms. Banerjee on Monday, calling the blockade “poorly planned” during a video conference the Prime Minister had with the chief ministers of all states.

Ghosh said the dismissal of the health secretary shows there was “something seriously wrong with the state’s handling of the pandemic.”

“Before, when questions were raised about the PDS system, the state had eliminated its food secretary, now when questions are raised about managing the COVID-19 crisis, the health secretary has been sidetracked. This shows that the allegations they were correct and the state government is now trying to clean up the mess using scapegoats, “he said.

“All decisions are made after the consent of the prime minister, so how can you deny your responsibility?” Mr. Ghosh asked.

Amid a furious controversy over the alleged mismanagement of the COVID-19 crisis, Banerjee broke the whip against Health Secretary Vivek Kumar on Tuesday by transferring him from the post, prompting the opposition to claim that the removal only it proves that “something was very wrong”.

The state president of BJP demanded that the state government preserve the ashes of the Hindu patients who died from COVID, so that their relatives can carry out the last rites with the ashes.

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