The Asian Age

‘AAP govt trying to paralyse BJP-led municipal bodies’

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The BJP on Wednesday accused the Delhi government of trying to paralyse the party-led municipal corporatio­ns in the city by using means such as stopping release of funds, reducing financial allocation or shutting Covid vaccinatio­n centres run by them.

In a joint press conference Delhi BJP chief Adesh Gupta, Leader of Opposition in the Delhi Assembly Ramvir Singh Bidhuri and BJP MP Meenakshi Lekhi also alleged that the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government in Delhi was crippling the civic bodies financiall­y.

The three municipal corporatio­ns of Delhi (MCDs) are the South Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n, the North Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n and the East Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n.

The Delhi government after “colluding with private health care facilities” has shut all Covid vaccinatio­n centres run by the MCDs, Bidhuri alleged.

“The MCDs were running 200 vaccinatio­n centres and over 10 lakh people were vaccinated there. But the government after

colluding with private hospitals, shut all the MCDrun vaccinatio­n centres and now people are forced to pay for vaccine at private hospitals,” he said. “Had the Delhi government provided us with vaccines in time, people would have got vaccinated for free at our MCD-run vaccinatio­n centres and would not have to go to private hospitals and pay for it,” Bidhuri added.

The BJP leaders also accused the AAP of holding “political grudges” against the three civic bodies. “While in the past seven years the budget of the Delhi government has

increased from `37,450 crore to `69,000 crore, the funds allocated to the MCDs by the Delhi government last year decreased from `6,828 crore to `6,172 crore. This is a reduction of `656 crore within a year,” Gupta said.

On the alleged fall in financial allocation­s to MCDs, he said, “Not only this, where earlier as per the third Delhi finance commission, the Delhi government was giving 16.50 per cent share of the tax to civic bodies. Now, as per the fifth Delhi finance commission, MCD’s share has been reduced to 12.50 per cent only.”

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