The yesterday's encounter and reports of Pakistan pushing fake Rs 2,000 notes in India via Bangladesh were proof enough that the "ill-conceived" demonetisation was not helping curb terror, as claimed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, he said.
Stronger and sterner measures were needed to ensure fool-proof border security if the country and its people were to be guarded against frequent external assaults, the Congress's chief ministerial candidate said in a statement.
The note ban had completely failed in its vowed objectives of cracking down on terrorism and black money, Amarinder claimed.
Apart from continuing incursions from across the border, there was sufficient ground to believe that black money remained a serious concern despite a whopping 86 per cent old currency getting frozen overnight following the demonetisation, he said citing reports of frequent seizures of large sums of unaccounted for new currency.
He said despite repeated demands from the Congress to come out in the open with facts and figures to substantiate his claims of the success of the scheme, the Prime Minister has failed to disclose the total amount of black money that had come into the government kitty after the note ban.
This shows that the demonetisation had failed to achieve any positive results, Amarinder claimed.
Thousands of people had lost their jobs, small businesses had to shut down and investments had come to a freeze in the wake of the demonetisation, Amarinder claimed.
Modi should have spent some time analysing the pros and cons of the move before initiating it, or at least taken the trouble to check out its impact in the days and weeks after the announcement, he said.
Amarinder urged the Prime Minister to "shed his ego" and take immediate steps to ease the "woes of the demonetisation-hit people" of the country.
Four militants, two army personnel and a civilian were killed in a fierce gunfight in the wee hours yesterday at a hideout shared by the banned LeT and Hizbul Mujahideen in a village in south Kashmir.
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