Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
India

Modi: Our governance will be 'drastically different', will allay minority fears

Darpan News Desk IANS, 04 May, 2014 03:43 PM
    BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi has said a government headed by him "will go the extra mile" to give justice to all and a dispensation "where nobody needs to be apprehensive or fearful". He said a BJP-led government will be "drastically different" from the UPA's approach to governance.
     
    In detailed responses to an e-mail interview with IANS, Modi said a BJP-led NDA government led by him will be "result-oriented", will not hesitate in taking decisions, will work day and night and will be a "truly representative, transparent and sensitive government".
     
    He said he was confident that the "BJP and NDA may end up doing better than the best predictions among all opinion polls", adding that his priority, if he comes to power, will be to "restore confidence in the government, bring back credibility in the system and take effective steps to bridge the trust deficit that exists today".
     
    Modi, seen as a strong contender for the nation's top administrative job, said he expects the party's performance in states like Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal and Andhra Pradesh, where it has traditionally not been very strong, to be "the real surprise in these elections".
     
    "We expect to do very well in these states," Modi said in the interview in which he responded to range of questions that were sent to him over two days and on which, his aides said, he personally deliberated and responded, working late in the night on halts in Ahmedabad between cross-country campaign forays.
     
    To a specific question as to how he would address the fears of the minorities, particularly Muslims, about his government, Modi told IANS: "We are committed to provide a government where nobody needs to be apprehensive or fearful. We are committed to go the extra mile to ensure that not only are we fair and just, but that we are also perceived to be fair and just."
     
    To another question about opposition charges that riots may break out during a Modi government's tenure, he riposted that "today's India no longer responds to such fear-mongering" and some people were "spreading insecurity to get votes".
     
    About how different a BJP-led NDA government was going to be from the UPA, Modi said: "Our approach is going to be drastically different from the UPA's approach. The UPA government's approach was a legislation-based approach wherein they would just try to wish away problems by legislating against them. It was wishful thinking at best and lazy governance at worst.
     
     
    "You cannot solve serious problems of poverty and unemployment by just coming out with pieces of legislation without backing it up with a concrete action plan to implement the provisions," said the Bharatiya Janata Party veteran.
     
    "Our focus is going to be on time-bound implementation of various initiatives, where priority would be given to reviving the economy and growth," Modi told IANS.
     
    He said his government would "revive investor sentiment and start taking decisions to clear various pending investment proposals".
     
    "Our focus is going to be clearly on infrastructure and the manufacturing sector. It will not only encourage investment, but will also produce the required employment opportunities."
     
    To a question on a possible Modi cabinet, he said the BJP had enough talent and experience, particularly naming Sushma Swaraj and Arun Jaitley, leader of the opposition in the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha respectively, in "bringing important issues to the notice of the people".
     
    He said the "single biggest achievement" of the Lok Sabha election campaign has been "to move away from a feeling of cynicism and pessimism to a feeling of hope and optimism".
     
    He blamed the opposition parties "staring at defeat" for indulging "in abusive language which has reduced the discourse of the campaign by several notches" but refused to apportion any blame to his own people.
     
    Modi said: "I think it is their (opposition) single-minded focus on somehow attacking Modi and stopping him which has brought a lot of support from the people of India to me."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    India Votes: Three-way battle in Delhi for over 12 mn voters

    India Votes: Three-way battle in Delhi for over 12 mn voters
    Over 12 million voters will Thursday decide the fate of three main political parties - the BJP, the Congress and the AAP - in Delhi's seven Lok Sabha constituencies.

    India Votes: Three-way battle in Delhi for over 12 mn voters

    Mamata's 'hate speech' against poll panel under scanner

    Mamata's 'hate speech' against poll panel under scanner
    The videos of West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's speech, where she had cast aspersions on the functioning of the poll panel, would be forwarded to the Election Commission in Delhi for scrutiny, the state's chief electoral officer Sunil Gupta said Wednesday.

    Mamata's 'hate speech' against poll panel under scanner

    Huge turnout in Lok Sabha polls in northeast India

    Huge turnout in Lok Sabha polls in northeast India
    India's four northeastern states witnessed brisk polling in the Lok Sabha election Wednesday, with Nagaland recording 82.5 percent voter turnout and Manipur as well as Arunachal Pradesh seeing around 70 percent balloting. Meghalaya saw almost two-thirds of its voters turn up.

    Huge turnout in Lok Sabha polls in northeast India

    Kejriwal meets attackers, asks police to catch masterminds

    Kejriwal meets attackers, asks police to catch masterminds
    AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal Wednesday reached out to the two men who had attacked him here, presenting them flowers, and told police to quickly trace the masterminds behind the twin attacks.

    Kejriwal meets attackers, asks police to catch masterminds

    Phase 2: Manipur, Nagaland head to polls Wednesday

    Phase 2: Manipur, Nagaland head to polls Wednesday
    Two northeastern states - Manipur and Nagaland - go to the polls Wednesday, marking the second phase of the staggered nine-phase elections in India

    Phase 2: Manipur, Nagaland head to polls Wednesday

    Modi: Corruption is in Congress' DNA

    Modi: Corruption is in Congress' DNA
    The Congress was married to corruption, BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi said Tuesday as he addressed election rallies in Karnataka and Kerala.

    Modi: Corruption is in Congress' DNA