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India changes the name of Mahatma Ghandi's rural employment scheme

India presented legislation that would expand a rural employment program dating back 20 years by increasing the number of?guaranteed workdays. However, opposition leaders questioned plans to remove the name of independence hero Mahatma?Gandhi from the programme.

In its listing in parliament, the government of Prime Minister Narendra modi said that the bill would guarantee 125 days of employment per year for manual workers who are not skilled.

The current fiscal year, which ends on March 31st 2026, will see 860 billion rupees (9.5 billion dollars) allocated to the scheme.

In a notification to the parliament, the government said that the change was made to align the scheme with the goal of making India a developed country by 2047 - the centenary year of independence from Britain.

A government source said that the bill is aimed at creating jobs through infrastructure development in rural roads and water supply, as well as measures to reduce the impact of extreme weather.

According to the source, the government has changed the way it funds the scheme from an open-ended expenditure based on the demand for jobs related to the scheme to expenditures that are geared towards budget projections.

The bill proposes to change the name of the program from Mahatma-Gandhi National Rural Employment-Guarantee Scheme (MNREGA), to Guarantee for Livelihood and Employment Mission – Rural (Guarantee For Rozgar And Ajeevika Mission – Rural).

Why is Mahatma's Gandhi name being removed?" Mahatma is regarded as the most revered leader not only in India but around the world. So removing his name is a question I don't really understand. What is the intention? Priyanka Vadra, leader of the opposition Congress party, said:

The rural employment programme, launched in 2005 by the Congress party, India's opposition, was named after Gandhi. Gandhi was an independence activist and a proponent of non-violence, who was murdered by a Hindu nationalist in 1949.

Analysts claim Gandhi's association to the Congress made the rural programme a symbol of the political legacy. The Modi government, on the other hand, has tried to promote figures and narratives that are aligned with the Hindu nationalist base. Reporting by Saurabh Ohri and Nikunj Sharma; editing by Mark Heinrich

(source: Reuters)