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Rediff.com  » News » Is Kejriwal India's Kim Jong-un? Congress believes so

Is Kejriwal India's Kim Jong-un? Congress believes so

Source: PTI
July 03, 2015 13:55 IST
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Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal is under fire over drawing up a budget of Rs 526 crore for advertising. Photograph: Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

Slamming the Aam Aadmi Party government for drawing up a whopping Rs 526 crore advertisement budget, Congress leader Ajay Kumar on Friday compared Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal to a "North Korean dictator who is into self-publicity".

The AAP government has come under attack over the size of its information and publicity budget for 2015-16 and Kumar, in a fresh salvo, said that the money was being set aside only "to continue the single man, hero-worshipping cult culture of Arvind Kejriwal".

"This money could have been spent for treating patients or creating hospitals, beds, schools, roads. Why is it (being spent) when publicity of the Delhi government was being managed in Rs 30-40 crore and was more than adequate," he said, adding that there is a Supreme Curt ruling on government advertising.

"Kejriwal is turning out to be like a North Korean dictator who is into self-publicity and self-promotion," Kumar told reporters in New Delhi.

The Bharatiya Janata Party, too, had on Thursday attacked the AAP government for allocating such a "huge" sum for advertisement, charging that it was also a kind of corruption.

Weighing in against the Kejriwal government, former AAP leader Prashant Bhushan alleged that its new FM radio advertisement was in contempt of court and that the matter would soon be brought to the notice of the apex court.

The Delhi government, meanwhile, has strongly defended the allocation, arguing that a separate head has been created for the first time for publicity and advertisement and that the figure may be less than the amount spent in previous years by various departments.

The Supreme Court recently banned use of pictures of chief ministers and other political personalities on advertisements, billboards or hoardings of government schemes. The prime minister and the president are the only exceptions to the rule.

 

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