Hindustan Times (Noida)

Centre, Delhi write to each other on ration

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

The Union government has asked the Delhi government to speedily implement the “One Nation One Ration Card” programme, which helps beneficiar­ies, especially migrant workers, to avail of subsidised food commoditie­s from anywhere in the country, pointing out that the scheme was already functional in 32 states and Union Territorie­s.

The One Nation, One Ration Card programme is a national platform that digitises ration cards, details of beneficiar­ies, monthly quota of ration under the National Food Security Act, 2013, and allows withdrawal­s through electronic point of sale (e-pos) machines.

Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, in a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday, said that the Delhi government is ready to make whatever changes the central government will suggest in its longdelaye­d doorstep ration delivery scheme, as he urged the PM to approve the project in “national interest”.

The Union government has asked the Delhi government to speedily implement the “One Nation One Ration Card” programme, which helps beneficiar­ies, especially migrant workers, to avail of subsidised food commoditie­s from anywhere in the country, pointing out that the scheme was already functional in 32 states and Union Territorie­s.

The move comes a day after the Delhi unit of the Bharatiya Janata Party asked the Delhi government to implement the scheme if its aim was to make life better for migrant workers -- a response to a claim by Delhi’s Aam Aadmi Party government that the Union government was stalling its doorstep ration delivery programme.

The One Nation, One Ration Card programme is a national platform that digitises ration cards, details of beneficiar­ies, monthly quota of ration under the

National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013, and allows withdrawal­s through electronic point of sale machines, thereby allowing the mobility of ration benefits. India provides cheap foodgrains to nearly 800 million beneficiar­ies across the country under the NFSA 2013.

Delhi has not yet implemente­d the scheme, which was first tried in four states in August 2019. A Delhi government spokespers­on did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

In a letter to Delhi chief secretary on June 8, food secretary Sudhanshu Pandey said Union food minister Piyush Goyal, in February 2021, had urged the state government to “consider expeditiou­s resumption” of electronic point of sale (e-pos) devices in all fair price shops in Delhi for transparen­cy in distributi­on of foodgrains and also to implement One Nation One Ration Card plan. “However, progress in this regard is yet to be made,” the letter said.

Delhi had suspended the installati­on of e-pos devices, which are similar to card swiping machines, but has resumed the process, which is critical to One Nation One Ration Card plan. There were also disruption­s due to the pandemic.

The past week saw difference­s arising between the Centre and the Delhi government over the new mechanism proposed by the Delhi government to distribute subsidised foodgrains.

The Delhi government has proposed home delivery of ration, which the Aam Aadmi Party, which rules Delhi, had promised in its election manifesto.

Nearly 7.2 million people in Delhi are eligible for some form of subsidised food at present, including 1.7 million ration card holders and nearly 3 million priority households, besides other additional food insecure categories identified by the Delhi government.

“The Centre’s stand is that the Delhi government can offer foodgrains to beneficiar­ies the way it wants to, under any scheme it chooses at notified prices, but the existing national system under NFSA should not be disturbed because it is a countrywid­e programme under a national law,” a senior Union government official said, requesting that he not be quoted. The Centre can offer additional grains to Delhi for any new scheme it may wish to launch, he added.

Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal on Tuesday wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi saying that it was a waste of resources to have two schemes trying to do the same thing. “Will there be double expenditur­e on the same subject in a state? This means in Delhi, the Centre and state will spend Rs 2000 crore each for ration distributi­on? Will that be a rational arrangemen­t?” he asked in the letter, requesting the PM to allow the state’s home delivery scheme “in national interest” and as a way to “eliminate the ration mafia.”

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