Flagging the impact of demonetisation on the ground, Chidambaram dubbed it as a "thoughtless move", "the worst assault" on the poor and worse than natural calamity for them while Gandhi said Modi's vision of a cashless economy has rendered the poor "cashless", robbing them of their hard- earned money.
Before banning high-value notes, Chidambaram said Modi should at least have consulted his "own man" Yashwant Sinha, a former union finance minister, so that the "monumental mismanagement" could have been avoided.
The Congress Vice President alleged that the NDA government has "blocked" the money of the poor through currency ban to favour a "handful of industrialists" and to recapitalise banks that have extended loans worth "Rs 8 lakh crore" to them.
Addressing a gathering at a wholesale market, Gandhi said, "The Prime Minister has brought honest people on the streets while the rich and the corrupt are taking money through the backdoor of banks.
Gandhi said the measure will "injure" the country. He also accused the Prime Minister of shifting goalposts over the issue by listing the objective of the measures ranging from unearthing black money to curbing counterfeit currency.
"Only 2 paise out of Rs 100 is counterfeit. Two days after Modiji made the announcement, terrorists, after they were slain, were found having new currency. Then he says he will make the economy cashless. He has made it cashless indeed, with the poor having no cash," he said.
"This is the worst assault on the poor in the country. Demonetisation has broken the back of 45 crore people. It is punishing the poor. I see no rich man affected by the ban," the Congress leader told a press meet in Nagpur.
"Daily wagers are out of work. Village markets and mandis have been shut for the last 30 days " Chidambaram said.
"World over small transactions are done in cash not by cards. To assume that India will go from 3 per cent to 100 per cent cashless in a matter of a few months, is an outlandish expectation," the former union finance minister said.
Highlighting the woes of the people in remote areas, he said, "The pain in rural areas is indescribable."
The Congress leader while seeking a thorough probe by the SIT on the matter said that recent cash seizures in Rs 2,000 notes across the country point to the "biggest scam" arising out of the note ban.
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