New Delhi: Trinamool Congress Rajya Sabha member Derek O'Brien on Thursday termed the Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train line a "vanity project" of the Centre and accused the government of not addressing the real transportation needs of the common people.
Speaking at a discussion on the working of the Ministry of Railways in the Upper House, O'Brien also sought transparency in the matter regarding the private trains, Tejas, while also criticising the government for lack of "big ideas" to further enhance the national transporter.
"Your outlook on the railways is different from the Trinamool Congress and many other parties... For us, the railways constitutes the infrastructure for the fundamental right of every Indian citizen to travel from point A to point B. It is a fundamental right as far as transport goes. You may look at differently, we do not," he said.
Citing the example of the Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train project, the TMC MP said, "We feel nothing (is) wrong with the bullet train at some later stage. To make that bullet train, it costs you about Rs 200 crore a km. Our priority would have been the dedicated freight corridor for 'sabzi' (vegetables), for 'chawal (rice), 'for everything else at Rs 25 crore a km."
He further said, "I understand, I say this on the floor of the House that bullet train is your vanity project."
The total cost of the project is pegged at Rs 1.08 lakh crore. The 508.17-kilometre long network will pass through Mumbai, Thane, and Palghar in Maharashtra; and Valsad, Navsari, Surat, Bharuch, Vadodara, Anand, Kheda, and Ahmedabad in Gujarat.
Accusing the government of considering the ability of common Indians to afford expensive trains, he said, "The Vande Bharat Express, the cost of ticket is Rs 1,500 to Rs 3,000 somewhere in that range."
Commenting on private trains, O'Brien said, "Tejas trains halted eight months later. (In) 2021, we are told dozens of companies filed tenders. Whenever RTI activists write to Railway Boards, no data is available. What is the communication for these private trains?"