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Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Rahul Gandhi mocks the poor, says poverty is just a state of mind

First, Congress leaders Raj Babbar and Rasheed Masood mocked the poor by their Rs.12 and Rs.5 for a meal remarks. Now, it's none other than the Gandhi scion who has come out with his own, bizarre definition of poverty.
Speaking at a function in Allahabad on Monday, Rahul Gandhi stirred the hornet's nest by dismissing poverty as just a state of mind.
Hailing the role of self-help groups in advancement of marginalised section of society, Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi said they provide the poor with "self-confidence to overcome poverty". The Congress leader made this comment while participating in a discourse on 'Culture, Deepening Democracy and Most Marginalised Communities', organised by noted social scientist Badri Narayan. "I understand the weaknesses of our system. I will try my best to help the people but unless and until the voice of the marginalised comes out from within, nothing can be done," Narayan quoted Gandhi as having said at the event which was organised at the GB Pant Social Science Institute on the outskirts of the city. "Poverty is just a state of mind. It does not mean the scarcity of food, money or material things. If one possesses self-confidence, then one can overcome poverty," he said. In this context, Gandhi cited the example of a poor woman in Amethi, who redeemed her self-esteem by getting associated with self-help group Rajiv Gandhi Mahila Vikas Pariyojana. The Congress vice president, who was accompanied by the party's national general secretary Madhusudan Mistry, also interacted with people from remote villages of Allahabad and other neighbouring districts. He assured them "my one and only political aim is that I want to tune my ears to the voice of the poor and the marginalised". Earlier, while inaugurating a branch of city-based Kamla Nehru Memorial Hospital in the district's trans-Yamuna region, Gandhi expressed concern over "increasing money-mindedness" among medical practitioners and urged doctors to take a keen interest in serving in rural areas. Meanwhile, the visit of Gandhi here, the first after he was elevated as the Congress vice president, was marked by protests from supporters of the BJP at a number of places. Activists of BJP's youth wing Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha (BJYM) and the Congress students' wing NSUI came to blows near the GB Pant Institute. BJYM activists had been raising slogans against the UPA government at the Centre and were attacked by NSUI activists when some of them tried to jump in front of Gandhi's vehicle waving black flags, police said, adding that two persons have been rounded up in this connection. News credits:India Today Online Allahabad, August 6, 2013

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