Addressing a public meeting at Jhakra village in Sarairanjan block of this district, the chief minister, who did not mention the RJD or its leaders by name, also said that communal harmony was not about sermonising but living with other communities in peace.
Quoting Mahatma Gandhi, he said needs could be fulfilled but greed had no end and recalled the proverb "kafan mein jeb nahin hoti" (shrouds have no pockets) which he has been repeatedly using to take potshots at the RJD supremo and his family members, whose names have cropped up in a number of corruption cases.
The RJD was a constituent of Grand Alliance government that had promulgated total prohibition in Bihar in April last year.
Lalu Prasad stood next to Kumar at Gandhi Maidan in the state capital during formation of a mammoth human chain in support of prohibition on January 21, 2017.
Now in opposition, RJD supremo Lalu Prasad and his son Tejaswhi Yadav, who is leader of Opposition in the state Assembly, have been making scathing attack at Kumar on liquor policy.
"Social evils must be targeted if we do not wish to fritter away the benefits of economic progress. That is why we did not stop at prohibition and launched a campaign against child marriage and dowry. Child marriage is detrimental to the health of women and leads to diseased and stunted progeny. The anxiety of arranging dowry often leads parents to marry off their daughters at a young age," the chief minister said.
Besides economic growth and the aforesaid social reform measures, the government is committed to maintaining communal harmony. Many people believe communal harmony is all about giving sermons. But it is an ideal that has to be lived, Kumar said in an obvious dig at Prasad.
The Chief Minister today completed the first phase of his state-wide "Vikas Samiksha Yatra".
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