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That's not the way we wanted it: Naidu on note ban

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December 20, 2016 15:10 IST

After coming out in support of demonetisation initially, Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Chandrababu Naidu on Monday said that this is not what they wished for and said the solution to problems arising out of the note ban still remained elusive even 40 days after the step.

“Demonetisation was not our wish but it happened. More than 40 days after demonetisation, there are still a lot of problems but yet there appears to be no solution,” Naidu said addressing a workshop of Telugu Desam MPs, MLCs, MLAs and other leaders in Vijayawada on Monday.

“It still remains a sensitive and complicated problem,” Naidu -- who heads the 13-member central committee to look into demonetisation issues -- said.

It was Naidu who had been a strong proponent of ban on high denomination currency notes of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000. In fact, he had written a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on October 12 reiterating his demand.

On November 9, hours after the Prime Minister came out with the demonetisation announcement, the TDP started claiming credit saying it was a ‘victory for Chandrababu’ over his fight on corruption.

‘This is a moral victory for the TDP,’ it said on posts on Facebook and Twitter.

‘Prime Minister Modi may have taken the decision now but Chandrababu had these thoughts even when he was in the opposition (2004-14). He had been fighting for scrapping of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes since then,’ the TDP said in a Facebook post.

The party media cell dug out newspaper clippings dated back to June 2013 when Chandrababu raised the demand for the first time.

But as people started facing trouble in exchanging the scrapped notes as well as in withdrawing cash from their savings accounts, Chandrababu seemed to change his tone and started making critical remarks about the Centre’s move, particularly the introduction of Rs 2,000 notes.

“I am spending two hours daily to ease the problems caused by demonetisation. I am breaking my head daily but we are unable to find a solution to this problem,” the CM said on Monday.

“We could resolve the ‘August crisis’ (an internal party coup dating back to 1984) in 30 days but this (demonetisation) still persists,” he said.

He said banks were ‘not prepared’ for a transition to digital economy.

“They are unable to even register banking correspondents,” he added.

Unless there were remedial measures, people’s woes would continue in the long-term, Chandrababu warned.

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