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Vote of Confidence in Goa:A FRAUD ON THE CONSTITUTION, by Insaf,2 July 2007 Print E-mail

Round The States

New Delhi, 2 July 2007

Vote of Confidence in Goa

A FRAUD ON THE CONSTITUTION

By Insaf

Last week’s vote of confidence in the 40-member Goa Assembly was indeed a blatant and scandalous fraud on the Constitution. The Speaker is supposed to represent the dignity of the House and uphold democracy. Yet he made a mockery of the system and the well-established rule that a Government must enjoy the confidence of the House. Speaker Pratapsinh Rane bailed out the shaky Congress-led Government of Digambar Kamat by brazenly disallowing three MLAs to vote, before the floor test. Of these, two belonging to the Maharshtrawadi Gomantak Party were well within their rights to withdraw support to the Government. Worse, Rane went a step further and cast his vote in favour of the Government even though the motion had already been passed by a voice vote in the absence of the Opposition, which had walked out.   

That is not all. The Speaker, obviously under heavy pressure from his Congress bosses in New Delhi, also went against the clear directions of the Governor, S C Jamir. The Governor had informed the Goa Democratic Front, led by leader of the Opposition, Manohar Parrikar that he had asked the Speaker to ensure that the floor test was conducted before any other business. He had also appointed observers to oversee the voting. Yet Speaker Rane went his own way, leading the Opposition to demand that Jamir should undo the constitutional mess and dismiss the Kamat Government. The matter has now gone before the Supreme Court which is due to take it up early next week. Clearly, the future of India’s young democracy is at stake!      

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First Time In Nagaland

There is fresh hope for durable peace in Nagaland. The latest round of talks between the Centre and the National Socialist Council of Nagaland (IM) earlier this week has taken a positive turn. For the first time in its history of ten years of parleys, the two sides met across the table in Nagaland. Initially, the NSCN leaders insisted on talks only on foreign soil – Amsterdam or Bangkok. Last year, they agreed to meet in New Delhi. The visit this time to Dimapur by the NSCN (IM) leaders, headed by Isak Chishi Swu and Muivah, has not only given peace a new thrust, but more importantly provided the leaders and the local people an opportunity to interact and understand each others feelings and outlook. Importantly, the ceasefire has been extended “indefinitely.”

Information available shows that the Dimapur parleys were marked by an encouraging outcome. The NSCN(IM) appears to have more or less, agreed to the Centre’s firm stand that its demand for sovereignty is “unacceptable” and that a solution would have to be found within the framework of the Constitution. The NSCN (IM) seems agreeable to remaining a part of India but insists that this would have to be on the basis of a “special federal relationship”. This is not going to be easy for New Delhi to accept in view of the basic fact that India, according to the Constitution, is a Union of States and not a federation.  In fact, the word federation does not occur anywhere in the Constitution. Moreover, conceding a “federal relationship” would open a Pandora’s box for the Centre. More and more States are now demanding “federal powers.”  

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Falling Democratic Norms

Recent events in Andhra Pradesh too smack of falling democratic norms and standards. Time was when members of its State Assembly and the Council observed the highest standards of decorum. Both the leader of the House and the leader of the Opposition refrained from making personal allegations against each other. But this lasted only till the Telugu Desam came to power. Chandrababu Naidu as the TDP Chief Minister had spats with the present incumbent, Dr. Y.S. Rajasekhar Reddy, then leader of the Opposition. Last week Naidu once again found himself at the receiving end when Dr. Reddy went to the extent of saying that Naidu’s mother would be sorry for having given birth to him. Expectedly, this led to an upheaval. Fortunately, good sense prevailed on all sides. Dr. Reddy tendered an unconditional apology and Naidu accepted it -- and returned to the House. But the incident has left an appalling mark on the Vidhan Soudha.   

Land for the Landless 

Landless labourers across the States are now aggressively beginning to assert their rights. After Nandigram in West Bengal, big trouble is brewing in Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. On Saturday last, eight persons were killed and six injured in police firing in Mudigonda village, in Khammam district of Andhra Pradesh, during a rally called by the Left parties to “distribute land to the poor”. In Tamil Nadu, the villagers in Sattankulam town, in Tututicorin District have decided to go on a fast on August 10, to oppose the acquisition of about 11,000 acres by the Tata group for its Rs 2,500-crore titanium-dioxide project. They plan to fight it out. One common factor stands out in all these incidents: the protest is for land, not money. While politicians in the three States are using the incidents to gain political mileage, they appear to be missing the wood for the trees. A new movement demanding land for the landless is taking shape.

Labourers & Tourists Flee Kashmir?

Tourism and development have been witnessing a revival in trouble-torn Kashmir. Sadly, however both appear to be in for fresh trouble. A blast in a tourist bus in the Valley on Sunday last, is likely to see holiday goers packing their bags and leaving. A repeat of what happened last summer after a similar attack, in which 16 people were killed. Tourists from Gujarat, a major influx, and other States simply cancelled their bookings, causing losses and heartburn amongst hoteliers and houseboat owners.

Worse, Kashmir is witnessing a massive exodus of workers thanks to the “Quit Kashmir” notice to migrant labourers by the Hizbul Mujahadeen. The call that they must leave Kashmir within a week follows an incident in which a schoolgirl was allegedly raped by two migrant labourers. The threat is bound to affect construction activity in the Valley, which started picking up during the Chief Ministership of Mufti Mohd. Sayeed. This should be a cause of serious concern to the present successor Government of Ghulam Nabi Azad. With three-and-a-half lakh migrant labourers sustaining the Valley’s “construction boom” of roads, bridges and much else, the Government can ill-afford to let the Mujahadeen have their way.

Monsoon Playing Havoc

Incessant rains across the north-eastern region continue to play havoc in some States. The flood situation in Assam and Bihar is getting from bad to worse, with over 11 lakh and 28 lakh people getting affected respectively. Meghalaya and Garwhal are trying to cope with landslides. Threat of flood looms large in Uttar Pradesh, with already 25 people having died in rain-related incidents. Over 5000 pilgrims to Badrinath were stranded. Over 26,000 hectares of crop has got submerged in Assam. The Army has been put on alert in Bihar. Rivers in West Bengal’s Cooch Behar district are flowing above the danger mark. And, Kerala has suffered losses of Rs 15,000 crore. While the State Administration is working round-the-clock viz rescue operations and disaster management, the Kerala Chief Minister V S Achuthanandan has found a novel way to get relief. Last Sunday he threatened to stage a dharna outside the Prime Minister’s House at 7 Race Course Road if the Centre continued to ignore his demand for monsoon disaster aid. ---INFA

 (Copyright, India News and Feature Alliance)

 

 

New Threat Of Drought:MONSOON GOES MISSING IN CENTRAL INDIA, by Insaf, 25 July 2007 Print E-mail

Round The States

New Delhi, 25 July 2007

New Threat Of Drought

MONSOON GOES MISSING IN CENTRAL INDIA

By Insaf

The monsoon has gone missing in Central India, causing anxiety to both farmers and weather forecasters. The States of Haryana, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, North Rajasthan and UP, should have got maximum rainfall between mid-July and mid-August in the normal course. But this has not happened, depriving these States of the much-needed showers. Till July 10 there were no complaints. However, the subsequent two weeks have made the weatherman sit up. A similar phenomenon in July 2002 and 2004 led to a drought! And, if this break lasts three weeks to a month, then there is trouble for sure. All crops, such as maize, rice and arhar, sown in the month of June, which witnessed a good monsoon, are in the development phase and require rain.

So far it’s raining only in the North East, with rest of the country getting scattered rain. According to the Met a normal monsoon has a permanent trough over Pakistan and North West India and low pressure over the Bay of Bengal. Both are missing with no signs of revival for at least the next five to seven days. With reasons such as global weather patterns being cited for this break in monsoon, the Met office has recast its forecast and says the season’s rainfall is short by two per cent. All eyes are now raised towards the sky, hopefully praying for the rain gods to smile. Else the panic button in these States would need to be pushed.             

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Rebellion In BJP States

The Presidential poll is over. UPA’s Pratibha Patil has moved into Rashtrapati Bhawan. But the outcome of the poll has inflicted unexpected scars on the BJP and set the alarm bells ringing in the States of Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh ruled by it. Contrary to expectations, rebellion raised its ugly head among the party MLAs in the three States. Five party MLAs in Gujarat supported Pratibha Patil in a show of defiance against Chief Minister Narendra Modi. Eleven party MLAs in Madhya Pradesh deliberately invalidated their votes to express their anger against the leadership. The rebels identically wrote either “Jai Shri Ram” or “Hari Om” on their respective ballot papers. Two BJP MLAs in Chhattisgarh preferred not to vote for NDA’s Bhairon Singh Shekhawat. Clearly, the signs are ominous for the BJP and an indication of bigger trouble ahead.

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Naxalites Move Into Tamil Nadu?

Will Tamil Nadu turn into another Andhra Pradesh? Of late, reports of “naxal” elements moving about in villages have come to the notice of the local village administration. A handful of men arrested nearby E Pudukkottai village claimed to be members of the CPI (Maoists) and the guns recovered were “rusted”. The State Government has been on alert following the arrest of CPI (Maoist) leader Sundaramoorthy and two others last month. Special police teams have been asked to comb forests in Chennai, Salem, Madurai, Coimbatore, Dharamapuri and Krishnagiri. Even though the last naxalite incident took place way back in 2002, the State cannot afford to be complacent, as some districts have long stretches of thick forests on its borders with Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka

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Hated Dadua Killed in UP

Twentyfive-years of long search of the Special Task Force of the Uttar Pradesh Police is finally over. The notorious dacoit Shiv Kumar Kurmi alias Dadua was gunned down on Sunday last. The encounter in the forests of Chitrakoot district brought an end to a reign of terror involving over 200 kidnappings, murders and extortions in the districts of UP and Madhya Pradesh. Dadua, who carried a reward of Rs 5 lakhs in UP and another Rs 1 lakh in MP, wielded incredible political influence. Anyone contesting an election from his area had no other choice but to first seek his blessings! Originally, a staunch BSP supporter, Dadua appears to have miscalculated this time by switching over to the Mulayam Singh Yadav camp after the last general elections. Interestingly, UP Chief Minister, Mayawati, has announced a reward of Rs.1 lakh for each member of the STF team.

News of the killing of Dadua brought a sense of relief in UP and in MP. But it was short lived. The night after Dadua was killed, another dreaded dacoit Ambika Patel alias Thokia, retaliated and gunned down six STF jawans and the police informer. Thokia appears to be eager to try and inherit Dadua’s legacy. But this is not going to be easy. Mayawati is determined to enforce law and order and prove to be one-up on Mulayam Singh as Chief Minister. Much will ultimately depend on the cooperation of neighbouring Madhya Pradesh.

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Mayawati & Commonwealth Games

In the perennial tussle between Mayawati and Mulayam Singh, preparations for the Commonwealth Games 2010 may run into rough weather. Chief Minister Mayawati has decided to review 14 hotel sites in Noida and Ghaziabad by Mulayam Singh. This is giving sleepless nights to the Union Sports Ministry. Singh’s government is said to have changed the norms for allotment and issued these under “industrial” rather than “commercial” category. “Urgent requirement of rooms” was its justification, given the background that about 20,000 hotels are needed in the National Capital Region to host the Games. If she reverses the norms again, Mayawati may well run the risk of being termed a spoilsport like the Jharkhand Government.

Shockingly, the Jharkhand Government has put up its hands in hosting the 34th National Games, which are barely four months away---from 15 to 25 November. The Jhakhand Government has simply told the Indian Olympic Association that it is not prepared to host the games. The callousness shown by Ranchi is unbeatable. No infrastructure, be it an athletics stadium, or a velodrome, or an aquatic complex plus swimming pool, or a shooting range, is ready yet. And while the Jharkhand Government awaits a new schedule to host the games, it has an added worry: of how to pay a penalty of Rs five crore!

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Arunachal For Status Quo

Top Arunachal leaders, headed by former Chief Minister Gegong Apang are keeping their fingers crossed. They want status quo of all Parliamentary and Assembly constituencies in the State and no fresh delimitation. Happily for these leaders, Delimitation Commission Chairman Kuldip Singh has appreciated their stand and recommended to the Union Law and Justice Ministry that status quo be maintained. Gegong Apang has also met the Union Law and Justice Minister, H.R. Bhardwaj, who gave him a patient hearing. His main plea: Status quo is required since fresh delimitation would greatly disturb the existing balance between the large number of indigenous tribes with different social ethos. It would also create problems for the thinly-populated inhabitants of the vast State with the longest international border.

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Female Infanticide in Orissa?

Suspected cases of female infanticide in Orissa have put the Naveen Patnaik government in a quandary. On Sunday last, around 30 polybags containing bones and body parts of babies were recovered from a garbage pit in Nayagarh town, 30 km from Bhubaneswar, the State’s Capital. Earlier this month, seven bodies of baby girls were found on the foothills of Durbari, near Nayagarh, forcing the Government to start a search in nursing homes and clinics. The question uppermost on officials’ mind is whether the remains are “linked to female infanticide or a human organs trade racket?” Answers had better be found fast so as to stem the rot before the State starts showing a declining sex ratio as in the case of other States such as Maharashtra, Punjab and Haryana.---INFA

 (Copyright, India News and Feature Alliance)

 

 

 

 

 

New Dimension Of Militancy:TERROR THREATENS Oil Hunt, by Insaf,18 July 2007 Print E-mail

Round The States

New Delhi, 18 July 2007

New Dimension Of Militancy

TERROR THREATENS Oil Hunt

By Insaf

Terrorism and Naxalism, which has gripped 13 States in its vicious tentacles, has begun to cast its long shadow on oil and gas exploration activities in some States. Leading high prospective areas in Gujarat, Rajasthan, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh and Jharkhand to be excluded from the forthcoming bidding for exploration blocks. The Home Ministry has sounded a warning bell and conveyed serious security concerns to the Petroleum Ministry before it offers certain blocks under the seventh round of new Exploration Licencing Policy. It has sought exclusion of Kutch in Gujarat due to its proximity to the Indo-Pak border. The movement of fishermen may prove to be a security hazard for exploration activities in the Jakhua and Sir Creek areas. Ditto is the case with blocks in Diu.

The areas proposed for exploration in Punjab and Rajasthan are too close to the western border for comfort and could well become soft targets for the militants and for firing from across the border. Also, while areas in the Hindu heartland like Madhya Pradesh are vulnerable to the dacoit menace, the Naxalite menace in Jharkhand and cross-border infiltration in the eastern part of the country is proving to be a major deterrent to the much-needed oil hunt. Assam has already gained notoriety for kidnappings (and killings) of employees of oil and gas companies and penetration by Pakistan’s diabolical ISI. Clearly, the States need to keep strict vigil against this new economic dimension of terror. Given that oil drives the engine of growth and prosperity.

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More Power To The States

The States have emerged winners in the ongoing Centre-States tussle over the Hydro electric policy. According to the new policy, the States will now have a free hand in awarding projects. Plainly, the States can now legitimize the practice currently adopted to award hydro projects---up-front payment, share of equity to the States or higher quantum of free power. Himachal Pradesh, Uttaranchal and some North-Eastern States have already adopted this policy. The Central plan also provides a level-playing field to the private developers who till now were the underdogs in the competitive bids vis-à-vis the PSU’s  like the NHPC, NTPC etc. In return for more power, the States have to adhere to only one condition: transparency in awarding the contract.

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Farooq Closer To Congress

Farooq Abdullah’s National Conference, headed presently by son Omar, is slowly  moving closer to the Congress, raising eyebrows in Mufti Mohammed Sayeed’s PDP. On Monday, its Working Committee decided in Jammu to support UPA nominee Pratibha Patil in the Presidential poll. Farooq Abdullah had earlier told Insaf that he would be voting for NDA-supported Bhairon Singh Shekhawat, who had proved himself to be secular and a nationalist as the Chairman of the Rajya Sabha. “He never favoured the BJP even once.”  The Congress is also responding to his friendly signals.” Farooq flew in the PM’s special plane alongwith Governor Lt. Gen. S.K. Sinha and Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad during Dr. Manmohan’s one-day visit to Jammu last Sunday. Moreover, the PM referred to Farooq more than once in his public speeches.

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nagaland Tops Agriculture Input

Nagaland, synonymous with insurgency, has broken new ground in agriculture. Its farm output in eight districts has grown at double digit rates putting to shame India’s vast fertile land. According to a recent district-wise data complied by Indicus Analytics, farm output in the State recorded a high of 17.7 per cent compared to the national average of 2.6 per cent. On an average, every district in the State showed an output worth Rs.75,385 per hectare in each crop season. This was primarily due to a shift in crop patterns with cultivation shifting from paddy to ginger, tapioca, passion fruit, pineapple, banana and other horticultural crops. Clearly, tiny Nagaland’s new agricultural song is a lesson to vast swathes of fertile India’s economic lament.

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Goa To Ban Rave Parties

Goa, the hot spot of tourists, may loose its position as the favourite destination. The State Home Minister Ravi Naik in his bid to create a crime-free society has accorded top priority to rid the State of crime including drug trade and other criminal activities. He also intends to put an end to the rave parties of the famous and the rich which had led to Goa gaining notoriety and bringing a bad name to the State. That he meant business was evident from the fact that he was not averse to invoking the National Security Act to maintain law and order and deal firmly with foreigners engaged in criminal activities and the drug trade. The State police has been asked to identify the drug traffickers and anti-social elements and check their activities.

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New Identity To The Kolkata Street Children

This is a tale of a new lease of life for Kolkata’s street children. In a first of its kind function in the country, over 50,000 poor children from the streets and slums got a new identity when they were handed over their birth registration certificates. These children have had to struggle for years to get “their right to identity” document because they did not have the wherewithal to pay for it. With this new birth certificates the children can now get admissions into schools, which till yesterday was a distant dream. Interestingly, UNICEF which had organized the function got famed magician P.C. Sarkar to make magic for the slum children.

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Noida Revs Up For Car Racing

Greater Noida in UP is all set to hit the fast track with its spanking new Formula One car racing track. The land has been identified for a five kilometer track in a sprawling complex of 700 acres which is along the proposed Taj Expressway about 8 km from Greater Noida. However, the Indian Olympic Association is keeping its cards close to its chest. Given the fact that it has shortlisted possible sites in near Manesar, Gurgaon and another at the Tughlakabad Shooting range. Either which way India will most likely host the FI race in 2009. Racing fans have reasons to keep their finger crossed.

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Mayawati Invades  Himachal

Mayawati continues to play her cards shrewdly.  She has struck unexpected success in Himachal Pradesh, due to go to the polls for the Assembly early next year, apart from giving a jolt to Sonia Gandhi and her Congress. Former Himachal Pradesh Tourism Minister, Vijay Singh Mankotia, has announced that he alongwith two other former Congress Ministers will be formally joining the Bahujan Samaj Party at a rally in Kangra on July 26. The other two leaders are four-time MLA Vijay Kumar Joshi and former Transport Minister Kewal Singh. Surprisingly, Mayawati stayed away from the gala dinner hosted by Sonia at New Delhi on Tuesday last to underscore UPA’s solidarity in the Presidential poll despite a week-long notice. The BSP supremo has surely something up her sleeve, which time alone will reveal.

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(Copyright, India News and Feature Alliance)

Presidential Elections:STATES BRACE UP FOR D-DAY, by Insaf,12 July 2007 Print E-mail

Round The States

New Delhi, 12 July 2007

Presidential Elections

STATES BRACE UP FOR D-DAY

By Insaf

The States are busy bracing up for the controversial Presidential poll on 19 July. Hectic activity is in full swing in various Capitals from Kashmir to Kanyakumari and Maharashtra to West Bengal and the North East. The High Commands of the Congress and its coalition partners as also the BJP and its allies have directed their respective State units to ensure cent per cent presence of all its MLAs, MLCs and MPs in the State Capitals prior to the polling date. Nothing is being left to chance. Notwithstanding, the Election Commission’s decision to allow MLAs to vote at State capitals other than their own in special cases. Some parties have even requested the MPs to be present in Delhi. In fact, meetings of some of Parliament’s Standing Committees have been scheduled to coincide with the polling date to ensure the MPs presence in the Union Capital.

Meanwhile, the UPA Presidential candidate, Pratibha Patil continues to busily criss-cross the country to solicit votes. She has already toured most of the important State Capitals. Even as her rival, Vice President Bharion Singh Shekhawat ‘connects’ with his friends, cutting across party lines, via a private telephone installed at his official residence in Delhi. He is also using private stationary to write letters to MPs and MLAs. The BJP on its part, has sent an emissary to Chennai to try and cut a deal with the AIADMK supremo Jayalalithaa and her friends in the newly formed United National Progressive Alliance to back Shekhawat. Recall, the UNPA, comprising 9 regional parties, has decided to maintain equi-distance from the UPA and NDA’s candidates, following President Kalam’s decision not to contest.

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Karnataka New Hub Of Jehadi Network?

Bangalore, prided as India’s IT capital and garden city, has earned the ignominous distinction of being dubbed as the new hub of Jehadi network. Following the shocking disclosures that the failed terror attack on the Glasgow Airport in Scotland, was allegedly the handy work of two Indian doctors hailing from Karnataka. Both Kafeel and Sabeel Ahmed, according to the State Police, were part of a large radical gang, operating in the State. During a raid at their residence in Bangalore, the police found three CDs containing inflammatory speeches and bomb manuals on Kafeel’s computer. A massive manhunt has been launched to find others in the terror net who were in touch with the brothers.

The Karnataka Police has begun running a fine toothcomb through several coastal and border districts on Sunday, hunting for affluent, radical young men who could provide key links in the global investigation into the failed terror attacks in the U.K. Not just Bangalore and Mysore but also towns like Gulbarga, Chintamani and Mulbagal have of late been infiltrated by militants from Kashmir. Clearly, from being a “safe hideout”, the city is now being seen as a “breeding ground” for terrorists, who have roots in the Middle-East. Needless to say, the arrest of Kafeel Ahmed, Sabeel Ahmed and Dr. Mohammed Haneef marks a change in the way intelligence agencies worldwide view Bangalore on the terror circuit.

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NEC Charts A New Path

The North East appears at long last to be set for all-round development of the sensitive and strategic region. According to the Union Government’s Vision Document, a supplement to its Look-East Policy, the North East Council (NEC) has now put in place a roadmap for growth and infrastructure development. Importantly, the NEC, according to the Meghalaya Governor, B.L. Joshi, will now play a more proactive role than work as a mere loan disbursal agency.  It is being geared up to be target-oriented having a specific timeframe for implementation of each plan. As pointed out by the Governor Joshi, lack of connectivity in the north-east had not only created a sense of isolation among the people but also added to the transportation cost, making trade and investment uncompetitive in the region. If Joshi has his way, all this should become past history.

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Gujarat Pre-poll Games

Gujarat is in the throes of pre-poll games. With five months left before the Assembly elections, the arch rivals in the State, the Congress and the BJP are trying to get the better of the other. Taking a lead, the Congress has started its poll preparations in full swing. Its state unit has started distributing application forms among the State’s tribals, exhorting them to claim their right on forest land (over land, minor forest produce, etc) as provided under the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006. In the hope that this will enable the Congress to expand its reach among the tribals, who have a sizeable strength in the State. The Congress’s optimism stems from the fact that the draft rules to implement the Act, are to be finalized and enforced shortly by the Centre.  Meanwhile, Sonia Gandhi has started touring the State.

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Terror Continues In Chhattisgarh

Chhattisgarh continues to be in the grip of Maoists terror. Carrying out another big strike in the State, the extremists killed over 23 security personnel and critically injured another 12 in the forest near Errabore in Dantewada district on Wednesday last. This comes on the heels of last week’s hacking of two farmers in the insurgency-affected Bijapur district. Their fault? Defying the extremists diktat instructing tribal villagers to desist from farming in the Bastar area to avoid exploitation of the State’s natural resources by the Government. Moreover, the Maoists also imposed a two-day economic blockade to reiterate their seriousness. Notwithstanding, a major breakthrough by the Chhattisgarh Police in nabbing three top Naxals leaders.

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Haryana-Punjab Water War Intensify

Punjab and Haryana, which share a long love-hate relationship over the sharing of river waters, are once again in a confrontation mode.  The water war between the two States seems all set to intensify with the Prakash Singh Badal Government deciding to move the Supreme Court on the construction of the Rs. 260-crore Hansi-Bhutana Branch Multipurpose Canal by Haryana. On the ground that it would result in displacement of over one lakh people in 70 villages due to flooding and over 29,000 acres of fertile land would be submerged. It would also lead to a disruption of the existing canal irrigation system in Punjab as the new canal would draw water from the Beas to irrigate farmlands in Bhiwani and Mahendragarh districts of Haryana.

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Maharashtra Village Seeks SEZ Status

Amidst the raging controversy over the setting up of the Special Economic Zones, a Maharashtra village, Avasari Khurd, has charted a new inspiring story. Around 1500 farmers from the village on Thursday passed a unanimous resolution seeking Special Economic Zone status for their village which is located about 20 kilometers from the proposed international airport at Rajgurunagar. They have also sought necessary permission and recommendations from the State and the Central Governments. No matter that farmers across various States, specially Haryana and Punjab, have revolted against the SEZs.

 (Copyright, India News and Feature Alliance)

India Battered By Rain:NEED FOR FRESH URBAN PLANNING, by Insaf, 5 July 2007 Print E-mail

Round The States

New Delhi, 5 July 2007

India Battered By Rain

NEED FOR FRESH URBAN PLANNING

By Insaf

Unprecedented havoc caused by this year’s monsoon in Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka, West Bengal and elsewhere has compelled almost all the State Governments to sit up as never before and decide in principle to take a fresh look at urban planning, development and governance in their respective capitals, cities and towns. The heavy downpour brought normal life to a standstill and resulted in untold misery for the people, leaving over 400 dead across the country. Worse affected was Maharashtra’s capital Mumbai, which witnessed large-scale cancellations of suburban trains, air flights, water-logged roads, traffic snarls, flooding of the airport and disruption of power supply. Once prided as the financial hub of the country, Mumbai saw all its grandiose dreams of becoming a global financial centre washed away and the metropolis reduced to a provincial town.

Shockingly, the rains have once again exposed the ineptness of the civic administration and the inadequate infrastructure to deal with the annual phenomenon of incessant rains year after year in various states. Thanks mainly to a corrupt polity, supine bureaucracy and   powerful land mafia which has resulted in illegal structures coming up randomly and haphazardly at the whims and fancies of the powers-that-be. This has resulted in unplanned growth with a scandalous lack of sewage and drainage facilities leading to water-logging and flooding of low-lying areas and washing away of slums and crumbling buildings. Notwithstanding, the tall claims made by all and sundry in the various State capitals of their ability to tackle disasters. Take Delhi and Mumbai. Incredibly enough, neither has one single civic authority to deal with the chaos faced by the two metros in the past fortnight.

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No Ray Of Hope For Bhopal Gas Victims

Twenty-three years after the Bhopal gas tragedy, there is still no ray of hope for the 20,000 survivors. If the UPA Government at the Centre succeeds in pushing through an out-of-court settlement with the US multi-national Dow Chemical Company, which now owns the principal culprit, the Union Carbide Corporation, the latter will merrily walk away with its liabilities. Plainly, Dow Chemicals would get indemnified from compensating the victims of the ongoing contamination and cleaning up the soil and ground water. Not only that. Exclude it from having to pay compensation for the damage caused to the survivors’ health because of exposure to the toxic contaminants in their drinking water. Astonishingly, this largesse to let the Company off the hook, seems to have the approval of the Prime Minister’s Office, the Ministries of Commerce and Finance and the Planning Commission.

These shocking facts have reportedly been obtained by the gas tragedy survivors’ organizations under the Right to Information Act. The bone of contention is an application moved by the Ministry of Chemicals in the Madhya Pradesh High Court appealing to the Court to order Dow to deposit Rs 100 crores against initial payment for costs of remediation. The Centre reportedly favours an out-of-court settlement as Dow Chemicals has made it clear that it will not invest in India unless the liability issue is cleared and the Ministry of Chemicals application withdrawn from the Court. Remember, 15,000 people died and over 5 lakh suffered health damages in the gas tragedy 23 years ago. Dow Chemicals is a $49 billion giant with 43,000 employees in 175 countries.

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Patil’s Clean Chit To Pak On Infiltration

The Union Home Minister Shivraj Patil, has once again let Pakistan off the hook on infiltration from across the Line of Control in strife- torn Jammu and Kashmir which has increased substantially in the past few months. On a two-day visit to the State to review the security scenario, Patil is stated to have told reporters in Srinagar: “We should not blame Pakistan for every wrong thing …. Increase in infiltration and spurt in violence.” Notwithstanding, that barely a week ago, the Defence Minister A.K.Anthony had spoken of a rise in filtration and described it as a “matter of concern.” The Home Minster’s visit was against the backdrop of the Army’s assertion of a sudden spurt in violence juxtaposed with the renewed demand by the Congress coalition partner, People’s Democratic Front’s for troop reduction. Patil also reviewed the arrangements for the annual Amarnath pilgrimage and visited the hallowed Cave.

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YSR Government In Cleft Stick

A 30-year-old Andhra Pradesh Government Order (GO) has become the bane of Chief Minister YSR Reddy’s life. The GO MS No 610 issued on 30 December 1985 by the then NT Rama Rao Government had restricted the share of the “outsiders” in the State Government jobs to 20 per cent to safeguard the interests of the people of Telangana. The order was issued on the basis of a six-point formula aimed at safe-guarding the overall interests of the Telangana people, following the violent stir for a separate state in 1969. With the State Administration all set to identify and repatriate the non-local employees from Hyderabad (so far 4500 non-local employees have been identified), the Telangana Rashtra Samiti has raised the ante for implementation of the GO as over 70,000 Government jobs in the region had gone to the people from the coastal Andhra. Needless to say, the State Government is caught between a rock and a hard place: To back the Telangana dhoti or the coastal lungi!

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Karnataka MLAs Fail To Declare Assets

Even as UP Chief Minister Mayawati, has boldly declared her assets at Rs 52 crore, her Karnataka counterpart, H.D.Kumaraswamy and 31 MLAs  have fought shy of doing so. All of them have failed to declare their assets and liabilities, according to the State’s Lok Ayukta N. Santosh Hegde in his report to the Governor T.N.Chaturvedi. The last date for filing the returns was 30 June last. Under Section 22 of the Lok Ayukta Act it is mandatory for the legislators to submit details of their assets including those of their family members before 30 June every year. So much for upholding the tenets of honesty and transparency in governance, especially when the air is full of scams, big and small. Only last week, the Janata Dal (United) State President demanded an enquiry by a Supreme Court judge into all land deals in the State since 1991. Many among these were bogus.

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Narmada Struggle Shifts To Bhopal

The travails of the Narmada oustees for “proper rehabilitation and resettlement” continue. The villagers affected by the Indira Sagar and Omkareshwar projects and led by the Narmada Bachao Andolan have been on nearly a month-long indefinite hunger strike demanding land for land or a special rehabilitation package for the adult sons and adult unmarried daughters of  the farmers being displaced by the two dams in Madhya Pradesh. They are also demanding land for the Omkareshwar oustees under the environmental clearance and also right over the draw-down land in the Indira Sagar reservoir. In the hope of some succour, the oustees have brought their struggle to the State capital Bhopal.

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No Salaries For Jharkhand Acting SPs

In Naxal-infested Jharkhand, 12 of the 22 districts are headed by acting superintendents of police, none of whom belong to the Indian Police Service (IPS) but are from the Jharkhand Police Service. The SPs all have air-conditioned chambers but get no salary as they do not belong to the IPS. According to Section 9 of the IPS Rules, the post of the SP is a cadre post, which shall not be filled by a person who is not a cadre officer. Thus no pay. Shockingly, the State has posted only 59 out of the 110 IPS officers sanctioned for the State. It is saddled with a shortfall of 43 IPS officer and with eight others being on deputation to the Centre. So much for combating Naxalism! ------ INFA

(Copyright India News and Feature Alliance)

 

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