Angry demonstrators blocked a railway track in northern India yesterday in protest against a steep hike in rail fares announced by the Indian government in its first tough step aimed at reforming a sluggish economy.
Scores of flag-waving protesters shouted slogans demanding an immediate rollback in the fares during the demonstration in Uttar Pradesh’s Allahabad, which held up rail traffic for nearly an hour.
TRAINS HALTED
TV footage showed protesters standing on the tracks and forcing the Ganga-Gomti passenger train to halt. Rail passenger fares were on Friday increased by 14.2 percent and freight rates by 6.5 percent to take effect on Wednesday.
Indian Minister of Railways Sadananda Gowda said he was “forced” to take the step “to meet all the necessary expenditure,” hinting at the financial crunch the network is facing.
The Indian railway system, one of the world’s largest, is still the main form of long-distance travel in the huge country. Years of financial neglect and populist policy of subsidizing fares have hit the network hard.
ECONOMY CONCERN
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s right-wing government, which came to power a month ago after overthrowing the ruling Congress Party, has pledged to revive the economy after it grew at just 4.7 percent last year — the lowest in nearly a decade.
The hike is seen as the first dose of the “bitter medicine” that Modi recently warned was needed to revive the economy, Asia’s third-biggest.
The opposition slammed the fare hike, saying it would put an “additional burden” on the shoulders of the middle-class and poor people.
OPPOSITION
“This comes at a time when the prices of onions and potatoes have skyrocketed. As an opposition party, we demand an immediate rollback of this hike,” said Congress spokesman Ajay Maken.
However, in an editorial yesterday, the Economic Times daily welcomed the “courage” shown by Modi’s government in raising the fares.
It said the move was justified, given the high fuel costs and “railways’ desperate need for more revenues.”
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