"Some people are criticising saying the government did not make ample preparation. I think that is not the issue that the government did not make ample preparation. I think the pain of such people is that the government did not give a chance to make any preparation," he said at a book launch function in Delhi.
"If these people had got 72 hours to make their preparation, they would have lavished praise that there is no one like Modi," Modi, whose demonetisation drive has united most opposition parties, said.
"The main issue is that the Prime Minister doesn't come to the Lok Sabha for discussion. The moment he comes to Lok Sabha, doodh ka doodh, paani ka paani ho jayega (everything will be clear).
"The PM doesn't want to sit in Lok Sabha. We have been stopped from speaking in the Lok Sabha. What you are you scared of ?" Gandhi asked.
Stepping up her attack against Modi, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee called him "a bad politician and a worse administrator who is spreading lies and relaxing even as the common people continue to suffer".
She also claimed that Rs 1.28 lakh crore had been lost forever due to the scrapping of the old Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes.
Her Bihar counterpart Nitish Kumar, however, reaffirmed his support to demonetisation decision which he called a 'Sahsik' (brave) decision. He said the attack on black money would have yielded better results had, apart from scrapping high-value currency notes, benami properties been targeted.
In the same breath he, however, deprecated the way in which demonetisation was carried out.
Kumar, who was among the first to welcome demonetisation, said, "I am seeing a minus with plus whereas many others are seeing only minuses."
BJP chief Amit Shah, who was in Bhubaneshwar, hailed demonetisation as a "masterstroke" for black money eradication and said the opposition unity on the issue was because the parties which had come together were hit hard by the decision.
"Modiji's move on black money has made leaders like Manmohan Singh, Mamata Banerjee, Arvind Kejriwal, Mulayam Singh, Mayawati and others uncomfortable. The glow on their faces has disappeared," he a BJP event.
the day, made a pitch for mobile banking to ease people's problems due to demonetisation.
"You can download mobile applications provided by banks on your phones and I want to urge political leaders, teachers, youth to give training to people on mobile banking," he said.
"You know because of corruption, black money, the middle class had been exploited and poor people were shorn of their rights. I want to stop it and give poor people their due rights," he said adding, "black money is eating into the country like termite."
The CPI-M continued to target Modi over the exercise, with its general secretary Sitaram Yechury calling him Delhi's authoritarian ruler (Muhammad bin) "Tuglaq" who has "gone missing" after issuing the "firman" (diktat).
"Barely 20-25% of cash demand being met in Metros. Rural areas even worse. While Tughlaq goes missing after his firman," Yechury tweeted.
Latching on to media reports, Yechury sought to pick holes in the November 8 decision as he noted that 29 crore out of the 30 crore Rupay card holders have never used their cards in a swipe machine.
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