Dec 04, 2015: The AIADMK party workers’ decision to stick photograghs of Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa on relief material supplied to flood victims faced severe criticism from the residents of Chennai as the city and its suburbs battled hard to pick up pieces of their lives.
Some rescue workers claimed on social media that Jayalalithaa’s photos are also being pasted on relief materials that are not even being supplied by the government.
“6 trucks coming from Coimbatore. Stopped at Sriperumbudur. And Amma stickers stuck on every pack and sent in. This is absolutely ridiculous,” Vinod Dwarkani, a rescue worker, rued on Facebook.
Several people posted scathing comments on social media to register their anger.
Party vows action
Following criticism on social media the AIADMK top brass on Saturday vowed action against party workers who impeded volunteers carrying out relief work.
“Rescue workers can send their complaints via email to info@aiadmk.com, tweet to @aiadmkofficial or call 044-28130787, 044-28132266, 044-28133510. Action will be taken” an official told The Hindu.
AIADMK party workers have also started putting up hoardings in praise of Jayalalithaa in several parts of the state.
One such poster, below, shows Jayalalithaa as a character from the blockbuster movie Bahubali. One of the initial scenes in the film shows an outstretched hand of Sivagami saving a child from drowning in a river. The poster likened the Tamil Nadu CM to Sivagami and the child to the flood victims to stake a claim that she has done all to save the people.
Anger also spilled on the streets of Chennai when senior ministers Natham Viswanathan, Sellur Raju and Gokul Indira visited Jayalalithaa’s constituency, RK Nagar, where people heckled them and forced them to make a hasty retreat on Friday.
Later at an press conference in the Secretariat, the first in recent days, power minister Natham Viswanathan and chief secretary Gnanadesikan claimed that relief and rescue work were in full swing and “extraordinary”.
The minister described the opposition criticism of relief works as politically motivated with an eye on the assembly elections early next year. He claimed even in the worst-affected areas people refused to leave their homes but accepted only food relief supplied by official agencies.
Similar scenes were witnessed in several areas where people vented their anger at officials complaining lack of any help from authorities in their hour of distress.
Relief and rescue work was stopped on Saturday in suburban Chennai on Saturday after fresh showers hit the city which is grappling with the aftermath of deadly floods that have left thousands homeless.
Courtesy: Hindustantimes.com