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regular-article-logo Tuesday, 19 November 2024

TMC’s decision to support GST Bill wrong, says Mamata

I had thought that the states would benefit from it. But, the Centre is collecting all the taxes and not giving us our share of it: Bengal CM

PTI Singur Published 28.03.23, 05:47 PM
Mamata Banerjee

Mamata Banerjee File picture

Asserting that the Centre has been depriving West Bengal of its share of the Goods and Service Tax collected from the state, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Tuesday said that the decision to support the passage of the GST Bill was wrong.

Banerjee, also the Trinamul Congress supremo, said that she had supported the passing of the GST Bill thinking that it would benefit the states.

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She was addressing a programme here in Hooghly district to launch the 'Pathashree - Rastashree' scheme for constructing around 12,000 kilometres of roads in rural areas of the state.

"It was our mistake to support the passing of the GST (Bill). I had thought that the states would benefit from it. But, the Centre is collecting all the taxes and not giving us our share of it," Banerjee said.

The GST was launched across the country on July 1, 2017. The primary motive was the "one country one tax" enabling the Centre to collect tax at once. The TMC had 'in principle' supported the Narendra Modi government when this tax framework was introduced.

The BJP-led central government has stopped releasing funds for the 100 days work scheme, scholarships for the OBC students and various other programmes, she said at the event organised by the state panchayat and rural development department.

From Wednesday, Banerjee will start a two-day sit-in demonstration in Kolkata protesting against the BJP-led Union government's alleged discriminatory attitude towards West Bengal She would also demand that the Centre release funds for the MGNREGA project and other initiatives of the housing and road departments.

Launching the 'Pathashree - Rastashree' scheme ahead of the panchayat election, Banerjee said that the entire expenditure of Rs 3.75 thousand crores for constructing rural roads would be borne by the state and not the central government.

Under the scheme, around 12,000 km of roads will be constructed or reconstructed in 29,475 villages of the state, a senior official of the Panchayat and Rural Development department said.

Twenty-two districts will benefit from this project as 8,767 roads have been approved under this scheme, he said.

"New roads will be built and old ones will be repaired within a specific time," minister of state for panchayat, Becharam Manna, said.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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