Tensions in West Asia have rattled India’s LPG market, breeding shortage rumors that exploded into political theater. RJD leader Rohini Acharya, daughter of Lalu Yadav, dominated headlines with a blistering X tirade against the BJP-led center.
Sardonically inquiring about the ‘gas deficit jubilee,’ she branded it the ‘Prime Minister’s Queue Initiative,’ linking it to historical ordeals like demonetization bank runs and pandemic oxygen scrambles.
The buzz prompted mass rushes to LPG outlets, especially in Bihar, where long lines snaked around depots. Faulty online systems compounded woes, stranding users without timely bookings.
Acharya’s post painted a damning picture of governance that feasts on public plight, striking a chord with frustrated netizens and opposition ranks gearing for agitations.
Delhi clarified no domestic shortfalls loomed, with PM Modi imploring rumor avoidance. He conceded logistical bumps from global flux but vowed normalization, citing COVID resilience as proof of capability.
Fueling a burgeoning standoff, the episode spotlights vulnerabilities in energy chains amid global volatility. Protests loom as citizens queue, demanding not just gas, but faith in systemic strength.
