New Delhi: The public was notified by the Delhi government about the unauthentic enlisting drives for the ‘Mukhyamantri Mahila Samman Yojana,’ a scheme that is to provide women of Delhi with monthly cash of up to ₹2,100. by way of the government of Delhi.
The Health and Women Welfare Department of Delhi stated that there is no such scheme that has been declared officially, although some political parties made claims about it. “Any organisation collecting forms or information under this scheme’s name is engaging in fraudulent activities without authority,” the notice emphatically mentioned.
A controversy erupted after the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) proposed the plan to provide monthly financial aid to eligible women in the capital of India. Former Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, who personally initiated the project, tweeted on his X (earlier called Twitter) that political opponents are “rattled” by the announcement of the scheme.
Nevertheless, BJP Delhi President Virendra Sachdeva opposed these statements, promoting the idea that Kejriwal was being a “digital fraud. “It’s indeed remarkable that AAP’s own department is issuing a warning to the public about a scheme that their party is advocating,” Sachdeva remarked.
Addressing the gaps in procedures, BJP MP Kamaljeet Sehrawat countered, “A valid scheme must have a budget estimate, approval, and proper dispatching of notice. But none of these were done.”
The planned scheme, which was declared before the Delhi assembly elections, envisages a monthly supply of ₹2,100 for the eligible women through a plastic card. While AAP leaders insist that this is a good initiative only for the welfare of the masses, the bewildering stance of the government at present has given birth to befuddlement amongst the potential beneficiaries.
The warning from the Department revealed a political rupture between the promises made by the politicians and the way administrators carry them out; therefore, the question about the scheme’s present legal procedure arose. The officials have feted the citizens to wait for the formal notifications before taking part in any form of registration.
“This situation embodies the gap between political declarations and their execution,” a high-ranking government official said, speaking under the code of anonymity. “Only when the proper notifications are issued can any registration process be considered lawful.”
The antagonistic relation between ruling parties and the opposition is further compounding the situation by exchanging blame on the legitimacy of the scheme; this, in turn, has left the women of Delhi in a dilemma about their potential benefits.
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