MP CM Yadav Slashes Cavalcade Size After PM Modi’s Fuel-Saving Plea

Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Mohan Yadav has reduced his official cavalcade to a minimum number of vehicles, following Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s appeal for fuel conservation amid global uncertainty. He also banned vehicle rallies during his tours and urged cabinet ministers and BJP leaders to adopt similar austerity measures. The decision comes hours after a newly appointed Textbook Corporation Chairman arrived with a convoy of over 200 vehicles, drawing criticism. Yadav also appealed to citizens to use public transport, emphasizing that national interest is paramount.

Key Points: MP CM Cuts Cavalcade Size After PM Modi Fuel-Saving Appeal

  • CM Mohan Yadav cuts cavalcade to minimum vehicles
  • Bans vehicle rallies during tours
  • Urges ministers and BJP leaders to follow suit
  • Follows PM Modi’s appeal for fuel conservation amid global uncertainty
  • Comes after controversy over 200-vehicle convoy for new official
2 min read

MP CM cuts cavalcade size after PM Modi's fuel-saving appeal

Madhya Pradesh CM Mohan Yadav reduces cavalcade vehicles and bans rallies, following PM Modi’s austerity call amid global fuel crisis.

"National interest is paramount. - CM Mohan Yadav"

Bhopal, May 12

Extending support to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's appeal for austerity amid global uncertainty, Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Mohan Yadav on Tuesday announced that his cavalcade will operate with a minimum number of vehicles until further orders, and there will be no vehicle rallies during his tours.

The Chief Minister also urged his Cabinet ministers, Bharatiya Janata Party leaders, and party workers to follow suit.

In a post on X, he said, "On the call of respected PM Modi, Madhya Pradesh is committed to reducing petrol and diesel consumption in the national interest."

"For security reasons, my cavalcade will have a minimum of vehicles until further notice, and there will be no vehicle rallies during my tour. All ministers will also use minimum vehicles during their travels," Yadav said.

He added that newly appointed corporation and board officials will assume charge with simplicity.

Yadav appealed to the public to adopt public transport, stating, "National interest is paramount."

Yadav's announcement came hours after a newly appointed Textbook Corporation Chairman, Saubhagya Singh Thakur, arrived from Ujjain with a convoy reportedly comprising more than 200 vehicles.

The incident drew criticism for sending a contradictory message at a time when PM Modi and the Chief Minister have sought restraint in fuel use.

Yadav's directive now puts the onus on ministers and party functionaries to scale down convoys and adopt simpler travel practices.

During Monday's Cabinet meeting, Yadav stated that PM Modi had asked farmers to use solar pumps instead of diesel pumps and to adopt natural farming to cut fertiliser imports.

"In the current global scenario, citizens have also been urged to make greater use of railway goods train services for freight transportation," he said.

He further said that citizens have been encouraged to use public transport or electric vehicles, postpone foreign travel for at least one year, visit domestic tourist destinations, refrain from buying gold for a year, and reduce household consumption of edible oil.

- IANS

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Priya S
PM Modi's appeal makes sense in these global times, but why is the onus always on the common man? Asking us to stop buying gold for a year, cut edible oil consumption, and use public transport? Meanwhile, political rallies and convoys have wasted crores of litres for decades. At least this CM is leading by example—now let's see the ministers actually follow it. 😒
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Sanjay N
Interesting that Saubhagya Singh Thakur's 200-vehicle convoy was the trigger. So one chairman's extravagance shames the whole government into action? Bahut accha hai! But let's be real—these convoys are a status symbol for politicians. If they genuinely cut down, that's a massive saving. I hope they also stop using petrol-guzzling SUVs for 2-km trips within the city. Common sense hi nahi hai. 🚗💨
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Sarah B
This is a nice symbolic move, but I'm sceptical. The real fuel savings in India come from reducing industrial waste and promoting renewables. Asking people to skip foreign trips or stop buying gold feels like a distraction. However, if the CM and ministers actually cut their convoy sizes by 70%, that's a strong signal. Let's track the petrol bills of the Bhopal secretariat next month! 📊
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Ravi K
Respect to CM Yadav for taking prompt action. But I'm more interested in the textbook chairman's 200-vehicle convoy—who paid for that? Petrol from which budget? These are the people who

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