Troubled Galaxy Destroyed Dreams, chapter 536
Palash Biswas
http://indianholocaustmyfatherslifeandtime.blogspot.com/
Top Maoist leader Kishenji had also extended support to the rally, welcoming the Trinamool Congress chief's initiative to stop violence!The Congress' West Bengal unit Monday welcomed Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee's decision to hold the Aug 9 rally at Maoist-infested Lalgarh under the banner of an apolitical forum and said if the party was extended a formal invitation, it will consider participation.
'We welcome Mamata Banerjee's rally at Lalgaragh on August 9. The democracy loving people will love to participate in it. If we get formal invitation about it we will consult with our leadership and decide on the matter,' said West Bengal state Congress president Manas Bhuinya.
Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee said on Sunday that the August 9 Lalgarh rally will be "apolitical" and invited all other outfits, which have called for the ouster of the joint forces in the Jungalmahal, to join the rally.
"We will organise the rally under the banner of Santrash Birodhi Mancha. I have come to know that there are many who want to go. I would urge everyone to join the rally. We would not hold it under the Trinamool Congress banner," said Banerjee at her Kalighat residence.
Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee had Sunday announced that her party's Aug 9 meeting in trouble-torn Lalgarh of West Midnapore district would be held under the banner of an apolitical forum 'Santras Birodhi Mancha' (Anti-Atrocities Platform).She said the rally will be for peace and progress, and establishing democratic rights for the people in Lalgarh.The tactical move of the Railway Minister is seen as an attempt to win the support of intellectuals and a section of those with ultra-Left ideologies. This move is expected to put pressure on the Left Front government which have denied permission to organise a rally in Lalgarh till now, citing security concerns.
A few days ago, a group of intellectuals had welcomed Banerjee's decision to hold a rally in the heart of the Maoist-affected parts of Bengal. They also announced their plan to visit Lalgarh on August 15 to hoist a flag of 'Independent Lalgarh'.
Banerjee reiterated her determination to visit Lalgarh and said she would visit the area despite all resistance.Mamata told a press conference and explained though political parties and other organisations could carry their flags to the meeting, no party banner would be allowed on the stage. She said Swami Agnivesh, appointed by the Centre as the interlocutor for talks with the CPI (Maoists), and Medha Patkar were planning to start from the metropolis on August 9 and reach Lalgarh on August 15. "But, I appeal to them to join our meeting at Lalgarh on August 9," she said, adding she had spoken to Agnivesh about the matter, but did not say if he had responded to her request. The decision to keep the meeting apolitical was to involve the people in the campaign for restoration of peace and democracy in the area, she said. Asked whether the district administration would permit the meeting to be held, she said, "Obstacles will be there.Earlier, the administration had obstructed us during (agitations) at Singur and Nandigram." Stating that August 9 will be observed as 'Ganatantra Bachao Dibas' (Save Democracy Day), Mamata pointed out although her party had observed the day at various places in West Midnapore district in earlier years, Lalgarh was chosen this time because it was under Section 144 CrPC for the past one year. The section prohibits demonstrations, rallies, processions, shouting of slogans, carrying of arms and other lethal weapons and assembly of five or more people. Charging the CPI(M) with stalling democracy in Lalgarh, Salboni and Goaltore areas, Banerjee alleged outsiders visiting the area were being "checked" by CPI(M) activists. A number of top Trinamool Congress leaders have been killed in Bankura, Purulia and West Midnapore districts over the past one year, she said. While the Centre had sent forces in the areas, they were being kept in the dark by the CPI(M) activists who were committing murders, rapes and torture on tribals, she said. Banerjee alleged that the foodgrains sent by the Centre for distribution through PDS was being sold in the open market by CPI(M) activists. Alleging the CPI(M) cadres have stockpiled a hugh cache of arms and ammunition, she said, "They have so much arms and ammunition that they issue threats all the time. Many plans are being made at many places."
Adequate security to be given to Mamata:Pranab
Union Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee has said that adequate security will be provided to Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee, who had alleged that a conspiracy was being hatched by the CPM to eliminate her. "I have seen (her statement) in the newspapers. She is a Union minister. Of course, adequate security arrangements will be made," Mukherjee told mediapersons in Kolkata.
'We want peace to be restored in that area. The state government is misusing the joint forces in that area. The state government is not using the joint forces properly. That's the reason the law and order situation is far for normal in the Lalgarah belt,' Bhuniya told media persons here.
Political observers feel Bhuniya's statement was intended at sending out a positive message for strengthening the alliance between Congress and Trinamool Congress before the crucial state assembly polls next year.
Banerjee, the principal opposition leader in the state ruled by the Communist Party of India - Marxist (CPI-M) led Left Front for over 33 years, said the party would observe August 9 as Democracy Day in trouble-torn Lalgarh.The Maoist-backed People's Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCPA) on Wednesday changed its stand and extended support to the rally called by Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee at Lalgarh on ninth of August. "This is not a political rally and many people like Swami Agnivesh, Medha Patkar,
who have protested against the government's oppressive policies and extended moral support to our movement, will be present at the rally," PCPA's new secretary Manoj Mahato told PTI from an undisclosed location.
Foreign Funded NGOs claim to be most Apolitical and we all know what it means. The Prime Minster of India, Dr Manmohan Singh is believed to be Most apolitical as the Extra constitutional elements representing India Incs and LPG Mafia are. We know all the Policy Makers , Intellelctuals, Media Dragons famous for apolitical stance. They may not belong to any Political ideology openly, but all of them have proved to be the Greatest SAVIOURS of the Zionsist Manusmriti Rule in this Divided Bleeding Geopolitics and APOLITICAL Face legitimate their Role to work in the interest of the Global Imperialist Fascist and Zionist Order!Bengali Brahamin Intelligentsia is the Front runner amongst the dedicated flag bearers of Change and it loses No Opportunity to Expose the Marxist Genocide culture. But it Never stands with Indigenous Aboriginal human scape and ironically Support Dr Manmohan Singh and his Agenda of Mass Destruction!
Apolitical is the Most Political these Days, Most Effective to Sustain the Hegemony!It is most relevant in Bengal specifically where the Ruling Left Front has opted for Lalgarh Operation and DIDI is demanding withdrawal of Security Forces. She has declared that the Maoists and Marxists are only Two sides of the same coin. The Vertically divided demography believes most the Subversion and Conspiracy theory against the Opposing Political Side. Railway Accidents in Bengal are never the matter of safetey or security. It is Political. Even, the most Apolitical cultural Scenerio is vertically Divided by the Politics. This time, Mamata has called for a Rally in the Heart of Maoism Inflicted Lalgarh Jungle Mahal while the People`s Committee against the Police Atrocity has declared to join the Anti Terror rally organised by TMC. Ironically the Committee leader Chhtradhar Mahato is behind the Bars. Lalmohan Tudu and Sidu Soren have been Killed. Other leaders have been declared ABSCONDING.CBI has issued declartion of Prizes for the Clues to arrest them. Being the Rly Minister of India, Mamata Banerjee has chosen to hold the Rally providing space for the PCPA as well as the Maoists wanted in Gyaneshwari Railway Accident and it is APOLITICAL!
In a bid to rope in other parties and intellectuals, as also the agitating tribals, Trinamool Congress chief Mamata Banerjee on Sunday announced that her party's August 9 meeting in Maoist-affected Lalgarh would be held under the banner of an apolitical forum. "The Trinamool is ready to organise
its programme not under the party banner but under the banner of Santras Birodhi Mancha (Anti-Atrocities Platform). Trinamool is more concerned at enforcing the rule of law in Lalgarh... Everyone is invited to attend the programme," Banerjee told media persons at her Kalighat residence.
"We are always against violence and for the last three years we have been fighting the police and the government's atrocities on innocent tribals," Manoj Mahato claimed.
Asked why it changed its stand after it earlier said it was against the event, he said it was because the programme was not being held under a party banner and had the common purpose to stop 'oppression in jungle mahal'.
Questioned if PCPA leaders would be present on the dais during the rally, he said those wanted by the police would not be there. Others against whom there were no charges would be present.
.
Apolitical
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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* | Look up apolitical in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
The state or quality of being apolitical can be the apathy and/or the antipathy towards all political affiliations.[1] Being apolitical can also refer to situations in which people take an unbiased position in regard to political matters.
[edit] See also
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ P.51, Rabin & Bowman
[edit] References
- Rabin, Jack & Bowman, James S., Politics and Administration: Woodrow Wilson and American Public, CRC Press, 1984. ISBN 970824770686
[edit] External links
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Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apolitical"
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"The CPI-M is trying to prevent us from entering and holding our meeting. The CPI-M is perpetrating a blood bath in Junglemahal (the forested stretches of West Midnapore, Purulia and Bankura districts where Maoist ultras are active). Come what may, our programme will be organised on the scheduled date," she said.
Banerjee said though she had earlier announced that the programme will be held under her party banner, "for a greater cause we have decided not to take any constricted view".
She also urged the people to be aware of the CPI-M leaders alleging "they were on the loose to kill the innocent people".
Banerjee also alleged that CPI-M leaders are smuggling arms to their men across the state. "Now an arms-rain is going on in Bengal during the monsoon period," she said.
"The CPI-M men conspiring against the Trinamool leaders and supporters, but we have to thwart their attack," she added.
Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee has already opposed Banerjee's Lalgarh programme, saying conditions there are not conducive for such a meeting.
'Caste should be included in census'
New Delhi, Aug 5 (IANS) Academics, politicians and intellectuals Thursday were of the opinion that enumeration of all castes in the ongoing census will help the country move towards a caste-free society and provide a sound basis for formulating policies.Speaking at the national conference organized by the Centre for the Study of Social Exclusion and Inclusive Policy of the National Law School of India University dwelt all aspects of caste enumeration in the census and said all castes and not just the other backward classed (OBCs) be included in the census.
Communist Party of India leader D. Raja said caste-based census will enable the government to formulate certain sections of society which are deprived of their due share of the country's wealth.
'Caste is a complex reality in India and so there should be a census. I hope that the group of ministers will apply their mind on the issue and agree for caste census,' he added.
National Backward Classes Commission chairman Justice M.N. Rao said it is the responsibility of the government to revise the list of the backward castes.
Satish Deshpande from the Delhi School of Economics emphasised the need to move from caste-blind to a caste-aware position and open opportunities for a rational discussion on related issues.
The demand for a caste-based census was made by the opposition during the budget session of parliament, with some members from the treasury benches supporting this.
A group of ministers headed by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee is currently discussing the issue.
Cooperate on GST, Pranab urges states
Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee Thursday urged Rajya Sabha members to push their state governments for a goods and services tax (GST) regime, a day afer the states rejected the centre's proposal for a constitutional amendment to introduce the measure.'Some more push is needed. I request the leadership sitting here to take it up with the states and chief ministers,' Mukherjee said while replying to the debate in the Rajya Sabha on price rise.
The finance minister urged the house to support the government in bringing the GST regime.
'If we receive cooperation from all concerned and introduce GST and bring within its purview petrol and other petroleum products, and with your support introduce it from April 2011, I do feel the variations in petroleum prices can be taken care of,' Mukherjee contended.
'If we have to introduce GST from April 2011, an amendment bill should be introduced in this session. Only then can it can go to the standing committee and be passed in the winter session,' he said.
Cutting across party lines, a number of states, including Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh and Tamil Nadu have refused to endorse a constitutional amendment on GST, arguing this impinged on their fiscal autonomy.
The finance minister also suggested forming a council of finance ministers, including all state finance ministers.
'I have no intention of becoming the super finance minister to interfere with the state GST,' he said.
He, however, pleaded for more powers for the union finance minister to enable changes in the indirect tax regime from time to time that would be ratified by parliament.
'The states will have the liberty to make changes in the tax structure. The passage of this bill will be the most revolutionary step in the country's tax reforms,' he said.
Kashmir protests: Indian police in Kashmir don't get a break
Christian Science Monitor - Ben Arnoldy - 1 hour agoThe police, meanwhile, are working 17-hour shifts as they grudgingly grapple with 'a political problem.' Kashmiri protesters shout slogans near a burning ...
Indian Authorities Struggle to Control Widening Kashmir Protests Voice of America
Held Kashmir unrest getting out of Indian hands The News International
The only package Kashmir needs is justice The Hindu
MorungExpress - The Economist
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India should have zero tolerance to Hindutva terror too: CPI(M)
Daily News & Analysis - 3 hours agoHe says It is a political conspiracy to defeat and defame Hindutva forces. "What we are speaking about is Hindutva terror, not Hindu terror. ...
Telegraph.co.uk (blog)
Common stealth at Commonwealth Games
Daily News & Analysis - Anand Philar - 22 hours agoThey have given the scam a political hue. These politicians will not only stir up the muddied waters but also deflect attention to non-issues. ...
Video: Heads roll
Why the Congress will not nail Suresh Kalmadi Daily News & Analysis
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Reuters India
FM seeks political consensus on GST
Business Standard - 22 hours agoFinance Minister Pranab Mukherjee today pitched for a political consensus to pass the Goods and Services Tax (GST) for the sake of rationalising petroleum ...
Video: Price rise debate ends
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Snap out of denial
Indian Express - 19 hours agoIt is makes it all the more unlikely if your domestic political space becomes apolitical. Ultimately it is not just economics but the political economy of ...
India Talkies
India sends envoy to Nepal over political crisis
AFP - Aug 4, 2010NEW DELHI — India is to send a senior envoy to Nepal to help resolve a political crisis that has left the Himalayan nation without a prime minister for ...
Shyam Saran in Nepal to help defuse political crisis Daily News & Analysis
Nepal Political Stalemate Continues: Indian PM's Envoy In Kathmandu Eurasia Review
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The Hindu
Delhi games a political footy: Australia
Sydney Morning Herald - Steve Larkin - Aug 1, 2010Australia suspects the Delhi Commonwealth Games have become a political football in India amid widespread corruption claims. ...
Delhi Games corruption furore seems political: Australian CWG official Hindustan Times
Australia raises suspicion on CWG 2010 corruption, calls it politically motivated SINDH TODAY
Will India Be Ready to Host the Commonwealth Games? TIME
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Lalgarh meeting under apolitical banner: Mamata
Hindustan Times - Aug 1, 2010Banerjee, the principal opposition leader in the state ruled by the Communist Party of India - Marxist (CPI-M) led Left Front for over 33 years, ...
PM releases stamp of Kerala Muslim League leader
Hindustan Times - Aug 2, 2010"As a political leader, he contributed to the first successful experiment of coalition politics in India in the form of the Congress–IUML combine," he said. ...
Economic policies affecting credibility of India's economists: BJP
Hindustan Times - Aug 4, 2010"The issue of price rise and the suffering of the common man is a political tool in the hands of the opposition," she said. She also lamented the lack of ...
RIM headache grows as govts seek BlackBerry access
BlackBerry maker Research in Motion Ltd on Thursday faced more demands to open its smartphones to government scrutiny as Lebanon joined India, Saudi Arabia and the UAE in raising concerns over security.RIM's co-CEO Michael Lazaridis in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, accusing the governments of picking on smartphones to score political points.
"This is about the Internet," Lazaridis told the Journal. "Everything on the Internet is encrypted. This is not a BlackBerry-only issue. If they can't deal with the Internet, they should shut it off."
(For Slideshow: Evolution of the BlackBerry, click http://in.reuters.com/news/pictures/slideshow?articleId=INRTR2H0R)
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said officials will hold talks with the United Arab Emirates and others who are citing security concerns in seeking access to BlackBerry's messaging service.
"We are taking time to consult and analyze the full array of interests and issues at stake because we know that there is a legitimate security concern, but there is also a legitimate right of free use and access," she told reporters in Washington.
Clinton has promoted Internet freedom as a basic human right. Earlier this year she called on China to respond to charges by Google Inc of censorship and a sophisticated hacking attack from within the country.
RIM's shares fell nearly 2 percent in trading on the Nasdaq and Toronto stock exchanges. The stock has lost about 8 percent of its value since the UAE threatened over the weekend to ban BlackBerry email, messaging and Internet services after three years of negotiations with RIM over access to user data.
The BlackBerry faces a ban in Saudi Arabia as early as Friday if RIM cannot reach a compromise there. RIM and Saudi officials met on Thursday.
Global smartphone market: http://link.reuters.com/fup82n
Reuters Insider: http://link.reuters.com/myw92n
Lebanon raised concerns over the smartphone on Thursday, saying it was studying security concerns related to the BlackBerry and would begin talks with RIM, which has its headquarters in Waterloo, Canada.
Media reports had said that Indonesia was pressing on RIM to allow monitoring of BlackBerry data, though the country's communications minister said it was not banning the service.
India, worried that BlackBerry's secure messaging services could be misused by militants, has demanded more access for its security agencies, and the country's telecoms minister said it had not reached an agreement with the company.
The Indian government may block the BlackBerry messenger service, but allow emails and voicemails, the Times of India said on Thursday, citing unnamed sources.
Government standoffs could hurt confidence in RIM on Wall Street, which had been reassured that a Gulf states ban would affect a tiny portion of the BlackBerry's more than 41 million subscribers.
Lazaridis said the company was in discussions with various governments, and said the issue will likely get resolved.
RIM has said BlackBerry security is based on a system where customers create their own keys. The company neither has a master key nor any "back door" to let RIM or third parties to gain access to data.
The company said Wednesday it has never provided anything unique to the government of one country and cannot accommodate any request for a copy of a customer's encryption key.
(Additional reporting by Souhail Karam and Emma Ashburn, Writing by Ritsuko Ando in New York, Editing by Tiffany Wu, Dave Zimmerman)
RBI can't be pure inflation targetter: Subbarao
Hyderabad, Aug 5 (IANS) The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cannot be and should not be a pure inflation targetter and it needs to balance between growth, price stability and financial stability, said RBI Governor D. Subbarao.Stating that inflation targeting is neither desirable nor practical in India, he felt that as drivers of inflation emanate from supply side, the monetary policy has limited role to play.
'In an emerging economy like ours it is not practical for the central bank to focus exclusively on inflation oblivious of the larger development context. The Reserve Bank needs to balance between growth, price stability and financial stability,' Subba Rao said.
'More often than not, the drivers of inflation in India emanate from the supply side. Food items have a weight of 46 to 70 percent in various CPIs (consumer price indexes) and are notoriously subject to the supply shocks which are normally beyond the pale of monetary policy.'
The RBI governor was delivering the 10th C.D. Deshmukh memorial lecture on 'Financial crisis - some old questions and may be some new answers' at the Council for Social Development, southern regional centre, here Thursday.
The central bank head pointed out that post crisis the dominant view around the world is shaped by the new environment hypothesis which says that flexible inflation targeting, rather than pure inflation targeting, is more efficient.
According to this hypothesis, if inflation is way off target, a central bank's first call is to bring it within acceptable range, and if inflation is within the range, the central bank should focus on other objectives.
Subbarao also said the autonomy of monetary policy from fiscal compulsions was once again under threat and called for credible efforts by both the government and central bank to resolve it.
'The challenge for the government is to continue the fiscal consolidation that started with this year's budget and for the Reserve Bank to regain the space to conduct monetary policy free of fiscal compulsions.?
'In the aftermath of the crisis, fears about the fiscal dominance of monetary policy have resurfaced. There are widely shared concerns about the extraordinary fiscal expansion necessitated by the crisis, and when and how long it will take to reverse that,' he said.
He pointed out that, like in most countries, in India too fiscal stimulus was part of the crisis response, and monetary policy had to acquiesce in elevated government borrowing.
'We can make progress only if we are willing to accept new answers to old questions when circumstances change,' he added.
Mainstream, Vol XLVII, No 37, August 29, 2009
Economic Reforms in India: Is there a Political Consensus?
Protiti Roy
Having lost almost all its wealth to the colonial overlords, the erstwhile Golden Bird was now afraid to allow any outsider to participate in its economy. However, a certain degree of liberal-capitalism was considered essential, and thus newly independent India adopted a "mixed economy", in which features of both the capitalist model and socialist model were prevalent. The "mixed economy", however, was not very well mixed, and had strong socialist tendencies.
The policy-makers adopted a planned economy approach to development, and advocated state run industries with just a few areas open to the private sector. This was largely due to the influence of the tremendous success of the USSR's economy and the impact of the Great Depression of the 1930s.1 But given the capitalist history of the Indian economy, the government was keen to reconcile equity with the free market.2 The Government of India, while recognising private industries, declared that the functioning of this sector—establishments, products, capacities for production etc.—would be regulated by the government.3
This state run structure, though advocated by the Congress, and backed by Left-wing parties such as the Communist Party of India, was not supported by the Swatantra Party.4
This structure worked well for the first fifteen years, but thereafter started to decline as a result of, inter alia, political interference at top management levels and declining accountability which came with the security of employment. State owned industries were afflicted by diseases such as under-utilisation and poor management of resources, obsolete technology, wrong selection of products, to name a few.5 Such problems led to a downswing in the economy. The Licence Raj stifled India's trade relations and deprived consumers of choice with regard to products for consumption.
Towards the beginning of the eighties decade, world oil prices doubled, resulting in a huge deficit in India's current account which had so far bordered balance.6 An inappropriate exchange rate led to complete stagnation of exports during the phase 1982-1985, causing persistent current account deficits.7 Though the economy grew rapidly through the 1980s, the growth was not sustainable due to unstable fiscal conditions.8 Inflation surged to an all-time high by the end of the decade.9
This crisis forced India to open up its economy to the world and adopt the policy of Liberalisation, Privatisation and Globalisation. The new government that came to power in 1991 had to restructure the economy, but the greater need of the hour was to stabilise the economy—reduce inflation and reduce fiscal deficits.10 The fiscal deficits would have to be substituted by foreign borrowings. But the structural model of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank involved India having to open up its economy and replace public institutions and investments by market determined investment and production decisions.11 Thus, the early attempts of Rajiv Gandhi to loosen state control over the economy finally found completion in the measures taken by the Narasimha Rao Government and the New Economic Policy (NEP) was adopted.
Once India had embraced the free-market system, economic reforms in the country were supported by a standby credit from the IMF. In 1991-92, this credit supported fiscal retrenchment and a credit squeeze in the economy. The rupee was devalued by 19 per cent. Import controls were instituted. The deflation and import compression helped improve the balance of payments to a large extent.12 The Indian economy has taken a definite upward swing since the 1991 reforms, and is now one of the fastest growing economies of the world.
However, globalisation leads to erosion in the state's capacity. The ability of the government in its position as a welfare government is getting reduced to a large extent. The world over, welfare states are giving way to more minimalist states that perform only the core functions of governance such as maintenance of law and order.13
Free-market forces have become the prime determinants of economic and social priorities in the country. The appearance of multinational companies on the global economic platform has also led to a reduction in the capacity of governments to take their own decisions.14
¨
How favourably is this form of governance suited to the various political parties? This is a crucial question. Soon after assuming power in 1991, the Congress Government, headed by the then Prime Minister, P.V. Narasimha Rao, announced its decision to liberalise, privatise and globalise the Indian economy. The Opposition reacted strongly to this, describing Finance Minister Dr Manmohan Singh's ideas as "far too radical for what the compulsions of democratic politics would allow".15
The Indian National Congress, in its present Economic Agenda, has claimed that its policies have led to a substantial increase in the growth rate of the country and has brought a major segment of people above the poverty line.16 The Congress also claims that it was the manner in which the reforms were carried out that made a big difference to their rate of success.17 However, a major factor in the continuing success of the economic reforms, through the regimes of many different political parties, has been the "directional convergence" of all these parties towards the same economic goals.18 They all maintained the economy's orientation towards the free market and encouraged globalisation.19
It is also true, however, that the parties in the Opposition lived up to their role of "opposing" the government. All parties, when in Opposition, vehemently criticise the policies of the government. Nonetheless, the debates in Parliament and the manifestoes of most major national parties have always argued over the minor details of economic policies, rather than objecting to the idea of reforms as whole.20
A comparison of the 2004 election manifestoes of the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Indian National Congress point out, interestingly, that both parties essentially guarantee the same things, though their promises are worded very differently. It is also interesting to note the acrimonious language in which each speaks of the other's failures, while taking the very same steps themselves.21
The BJP had opposed the Congress Govern-ment's policies of external liberalisation in the early 1990s, but after it came to power (from 1998 to 2004), it itself promoted external liberalisation and announced measures that aimed at attracting private foreign investment on a large scale.22
The Communists have passionately opposed liberalisation policies, and termed them as "abject surrender to the IMF".23 However, when the United Front governments came to power from 1996 to 1998, the Left-wing parties supported them all through their policies regarding financial sector liberalisation, disinvestment, foreign investment etc.24
Thus, even though the powers of the state have been reduced to a large extent because of the open economy, economic reforms are still being favoured as compared to the earlier socialist model of development.
The evident reason for this is the fact that ever since the Indian economy was liberalised, we have seen phenomenal growth rates, touching the six-point mark in the 1990s.25 The inflow of better quality consumer goods satisfied the middle class of society and high foreign exchange stocks were beneficial to investors. Thus, such conditions proved satisfactory to most people. The other possible reason could be the fact that along with the collapse of the USSR, the rupee-rouble trading system collapsed as well. All over the rest of the world, the dollar was essential for carrying on trade. Thus, it was essential to have a large stock of foreign exchange, particularly in terms of dollars, in order to carry on trade relations with other countries.
The fact that all governments that have come to power post-1991 have followed and advocated the free market ideology without any hesitation, also requires explanation. One possible explanation is the fact that after the Narasimha Rao Government, all other governments till date have been coalition governments supported by a number of ideologically neutral regional parties.26
In a democracy it is the people who decide the rise and fall of a regime. They are the foundation on which the political superstructure is built. Also, the various policies pursued in order to effect the economic reforms, at the end of the day, have affected nobody but the common man. Even if political consensus is prevalent among various political parties, it is essential that the vote-bank of these parties also agree to the policies. "Political consensus", therefore, cannot be complete if the consensus of the common man is not taken into consideration.
¨
The trouble is, what the people want, or even need, may not always be what the government considers before defining its policies. The external debt of the nation, while a major cause of concern for the government, is not something ordinary citizens would ever worry about.27 Similarly, the internal debt of the government, Budget deficit, balance-of-payments situation, financial losses of public sector enterprises, expansion of money supply etc. are economic issues which are of utmost importance to the government of a country, but themes that are very distant from the lives of the people.28
However, there is indeed a connection between the economic necessities of ordinary people and the economic compulsions of the state. A person belonging to the middle class of society would need a television, a refrigerator, a car, an air-conditioner, and so on. Economic liberalisation of the country meant that the government allowed foreign investment in and freer imports of consumer goods.29
But even among the people, there are differences in what different classes of people desire from the free market. The choice between better cars or better public transport system, cellphones or ploughs and pumpsets, soft drinks or safe drinking water is the choice that has to be made.30 Now, the production and supply of a product depend to a large extent on its demand and the price it gets in the market. The rich in society have more purchasing power, and thus, it is the cars and the cellphones and the soft drinks that get produced, not the ploughs and buses.31 Private investment would also, therefore, be attracted towards sectors producing goods to satisfy the needs of richer consumers.
Consensus for economic reforms, therefore, seems to be coming from political parties and the middle and upper classes. The interests of the poor are hardly being taken into consideration. Such a state of affairs is sure to have backlashes, particularly for the government in terms of votes secured. An example of such an incident was that of the Chandrababu Naidu Government. As reported in the Hindustan Times, "Though the state had made significant progress on the IT front and the reforms process had been initiated by the Chief Minister, the unrest in the interiors of Andhra Pradesh continued. Farmers were committing suicides and hunger and poverty had made life tougher for the common man."32
It is but obvious that technological progress alone cannot help a country progress. Liberalisation, privatisation and globalisation may ensure availability of foreign exchange and high quality consumer goods, but it does not necessarily ensure a decent standard of living for the common man. On the other hand, it may lead to loss of livelihood, if policy implementation is not done with sufficient care and consideration.
The Deccan Herald reported on August 26, 2007 that the Central Government had approved of the iron ore mines in Bailadila, Chhattisgarh, to be opened up for steel giants Tata Steel and Essar to prospect for their steel projects.33 The Tatas plan to set up a five million tonne steel plant at Bastar, in Chhattisgarh, and the iron ore would be used for that purpose.34
Nearly four years before this article was published, The Times of India had come out with an article "Mining Plans Threaten Water Security: NGO". The article spoke at length of a report by the non-governmental organisation, Kalpvriksh, about how mining activities are threatening some of India's most ecologically sensitive places, including Bailadila.35 Such activity will also be interrupting drinking water supply to millions of people as many crucial catchments would be severely affected, including the Sankhini river at Bailadila.36 Kalpvriksh called for "a rethink of development policies and introspection on the wasteful ways in which minerals are used".37
Counter Currents, an online journal which has articles on issues concerning common people, carried an article on how the mining industry is hurting not only the environment, but also human rights. "Refutation of the rights is characteristically multidimensional—one is the denial of the eligible rights of the people in mining zones, another is the flouting of law by the state machinery and third is the rights of the mineworkers," said the article.38
More importantly, the article talked of how privatisation, and subsequent mechanisation of mining, has led to the loss of livelihoods, and in cases where the workers protested, of life itself.
The mechanisation goes to such an extent that in future it may need only two or three workers to run the plant. The prophets of industrialisation talk about prosperity and creation of jobs, but what is actually happening is shocking. In the Bailadila mines, 10,000 labourers were rendered jobless at one stroke. All resistance was crushed. Ten thousand huts were burnt down, numerous women raped, and labourers fired upon. The orgy of mechanisation forced 10,000 labourers to face the desperation of hunger.39
Similarly, the Government of India introduced Bt cotton to Indian farmers in March 1995.40 Though it initially met with some resistance, the farmers finally accepted the new variety of seeds, and took to it in a big way. And, to begin with, the effect was tremendous. The cotton acreage increased by 20 per cent.41
However, India being a monsoon dependent country, and irrigation not being up to the mark, there were soon problems with using this genetically modified plant variety. The technology was not well-suited for non-irrigated areas, and cotton is mostly grown in dry regions.42 Bt Cotton failed miserably for small farmers, in terms of both yield and expenses, and it also did not reduce pesticide use for them.43 The cost of cultivation rose to a great extent and the farmers earned no profit at all.44 In Vandana Shiva's words,
The seeds aren't tested, they aren't adapted, the same seeds are sold across different climate zones, they obviously don't perform well. Instead of 1500 kilograms per acre, farmers get 200, 300, sometimes total failure; add to this the fact that even if they have 300 kilograms of a bad cotton variety because its fibre is of a very inferior quality.45
The crop failure hit farmers in Vidarbha and Andhra Pradesh particularly hard, and incidents of farmer suicides rose at an alarming rate. Dr Suman Sahai, the Director of an organisation called Gene Campaign, conducted a study on the introduction of Bt Cotton in India.46 The results announce, in no uncertain terms, that the government's zest to introduce private investment onto the agricultural sphere has cost the nation very dear. That the government has failed the people badly, is most evident through this incident. "Despite specific knowledge that Bt cotton would not work in rainfed areas, the government had introduced it in Vidarbha. The result was that in an area with a history of indebtedness, the high input costs of Bt cotton had increased indebtedness," says a report about the study in The Hindu. It also says: "The study revealed that many farmers adopted Bt cotton because they believed it was a 'government seed' and did not know that it was privately produced and marketed. They also accepted it because the government was actively promoting the technology."
Farmers have been committing suicide in hundreds. Their government failed them.
The government is the elected representative of the people and their policies, therefore, should be directed towards the benefit of the people. If privatisation leads to loss of livelihood, if liberalisation introduces such poor quality of industrial inputs, it is then meaningless to continue with such policies.
True, the economic reforms had their benefits —the life of a middle class consumer improved manifold, foreign exchange reserves skyrocketed, our GDP increased to levels unparalleled in the past. However, the poor just ended up being poorer. Development should be holistic, and should necessarily take all sections of society under its purview.
Politics in India stems from the people. Political consensus in our country cannot be taken to mean only the various political parties. It is true that the various political parties in our country agree that the economic reforms were essential. Most object to the stand taken by the government when they are in power, but they themselves further the same policies when in power. Thus, even if not in words, in deed there is a definite political consensus, so far as political parties go.
But as far as the people of this country are concerned, only a minuscule urban middle and upper class have benefited from the reforms. Most of India still lives in her villages, and even the cities have a large number of people living below the poverty line. How far the reforms benefit these people should be a matter of concern. They have so far not found any advantage in the New Economic Policies, and their consensus on them is definitely missing. Not just all political parties, but also all sections of society should have consensus on the reform policies before they are instituted in India. Regrettably that is not the case till date.
Footnotes
1. S. Palshikar and Y. Yadav, Politics in India since Independence (1st edition, New Delhi: NCERT, 2007), pp. 49, 50.
2. C.P. Bhambri, The Indian State: Fifty Years (Delhi: Shipra Publications, 1997), pp. 156-159.
3. Supra note 2 at p. 162.
4. Supra note 1 at p. 37.
5. San José State University, Department of Economics, "Economic History and the Economy of India", available at (November 8, 2008).
6. V. Joshi and I.M.D. Little, India's Economic Reforms 1991-2001 (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1996), p. 14.
7. Supra note 6 at p. 14-15.
8. Supra note 6 at p. 15.
9. Supra note 6 at p. 15.
10. Supra note 6 at p. 16.
11. Supra note 2 at p. 195.
12. Supra note 6 at p. 16.
13. Y. Yadav and S. Palshikar, "Globalisation", Contemporary World Politics, (1st edn., New Delhi: NCERT, 2007), p. 139.
14. Id.
15. R. Jenkins, Democratic Politics and Economic Reform in India (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), p. 12.
16. "Economic Agenda", Indian National Congress, available at (November 11, 2008).
17. Id.
18. S.D. Tendulkar and T.A. Bhavani, "Understanding the Post-1991 Indian Economic Policy Reforms", Global Development Network, available (November 11, 2008).
19. Id.
20. Ibid.
21. See generally "Vision Document – 2004", Bharatiya Janata Party, available at and "Economic Agenda", Indian National Congress, available at .
22. Supra note 18.
23. Supra note 18.
24. Supra note 18.
25. C.D. Wadhwa, "India Trying to Liberalise: Economic Reforms Since 1991", available at (November 13, 2008).
26. Supra note 18.
27. A. Bhaduri and D. Nayyar, The Intelligent Person's Guide to Liberalisation (New Delhi: Penguin Books India, 1996), p. 4.
28. Id.
29. Supra note 27 at p. 6.
30. Supra note 27 at p. 7.
31. Supra note 27 at p. 7.
32. H.T. Correspondent, "Andhra Elections", Hindustan Times, available at (November 16, 2008).
33. DH News Service "Prospecting 250 MT iron Ore: Tatas, Essar get Centre's Nod", The Deccan Herald, available at (November 9, 2008).
34. Id.
35. The Times News Network, "Mining Plans Threaten Water Security: NGO", The Times of India, available at (November 10, 2008).
36. Id.
37. Ibid.
38. Goldy M. George, "Mining to Destruction and Hijacking their Rights to Submission", Counter Currents, available at (November 10, 2008)
39. Id.
40. "Chronology of Bt Cotton in India", Inida Resource Centre, available at (November 11, 2008).
41. BS Reporter, "Bt Cotton Acreage Rises 20 per cent", Business Standard, available at (November 11, 2008).
42. Devinder Sharma, "Has the Bt Cotton Bubble Burst?", India Together, available at (November 11, 2008).
43. Rhea Gala, "India's Bt Cotton Fraud", Institute of Science in Society, available at (November 11, 2008).
44. Id.
45. Vandana Shiva, "Closing Address to the Soil Association Conference", Transition Culture, available at (November 16, 2008).
46. Special Correspondent, "Bt Cotton has Failed in Vidarbha: Study", The Hindu, available at (November 11, 2008).
Protiti Roy is a student of the National Law School of India University, Bangalore.
http://www.mainstreamweekly.net/article1594.html
Politics of India
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Modeled after the British Westminster System, Politics of India take place in a framework of a federal parliamentary multi-party representative democratic republic. India is the world's largest democracy.[1][2] In India, the Prime Minister of India is identified as the head of government of the nation, while the President of India is said to be the formal head of state and holds substantial reserve powers, placing him or her in approximately the same position as the British monarch. Executive power is enforced by the government. It can be noted that federal legislative power is vested in both the government of India and the two characteristic chambers of the Parliament of India. Also, it can be said that the judiciary is independent of both the executive and the legislature.
Looking at the constitution, India is a nation that is characterized to be "sovereign socialist secular democratic republic." India is the largest state by population with a democratically-elected government. Like the United States, India has a federal form of government, however, the central government in India has greater power in relation to its states, and its central government is patterned after the British parliamentary system. Regarding the former, "the Centre", the national government, can and has dismissed state governments if no majority party or coalition is able to form a government or under specific Constitutional clauses, and can impose direct federal rule known as President's rule. Locally, the Panchayati Raj system has several administrative functions.
For most of the years since independence, the federal government has been guided by the Indian National Congress (INC),[3] In India the two largest political parties have been the Indian National Congress (INC) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Presently the two parties have dominated the Indian politics, however regional parities too exist. From 1950 to 1990, barring two brief periods, the INC enjoyed a parliamentary majority. The INC was out of power between 1977 and 1980, when the Janata Party won the election owing to public discontent with the corruption of the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. In 1989, a Janata Dal-led National Front coalition in alliance with the Left Front coalition won the elections but managed to stay in power for only two years.[4] As the 1991 elections gave no political party a majority, the INC formed a minority government under Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao and was able to complete its five-year term.[5] The years 1996–1998 were a period of turmoil in the federal government with several short-lived alliances holding sway. The BJP formed a government briefly in 1996, followed by the United Front coalition that excluded both the BJP and the INC. In 1998, the BJP formed the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) with several other parties and became the first non-Congress government to complete a full five-year term.[6] In the 2004 Indian elections, the INC won the largest number of Lok Sabha seats and formed a government with a coalition called the United Progressive Alliance (UPA), supported by various parties.[7] In the 2009 Lok Sabha Elections, it won again with a surprising majority, the INC itself winning more than 200 seats.
At the federal level, India is the most populous democracy in the world.[1][2] While many neighboring countries witness frequent coups, Indian democracy has been suspended only once.[8] Nevertheless, Indian politics is often described as chaotic. More than a fifth of parliament members face criminal charges[8].
Contents[hide] |
[edit] Central and State Governments
The central government exercises its broad administrative powers in the name of the President, whose duties are largely ceremonial. The president and vice president are elected indirectly for 5-year terms by a special electoral college. The vice president assumes the office of president in case of the death or resignation of the incumbent president.
The constitution designates the governance of India under two branches namely the executive branch and Real national executive power is centered in the Council of Ministers, led by the Prime Minister of India. The President appoints the Prime Minister, who is designated by legislators of the political party or coalition commanding a parliamentary majority. The President then appoints subordinate ministers on the advice of the Prime Minister. In reality, the President has no discretion on the question of whom to appoint as Prime Minister except when no political party or coalition of parties gains a majority in the Lok Sabha. Once the Prime Minister has been appointed, the President has no discretion on any other matter whatsoever, including the appointment of ministers. But all Central Government decisions are nominally taken in his/her name.
[edit] Legislative branch
The constitution designates the Parliament of India as the legislative branch to oversee the operation of the government. India's bicameral parliament consists of the Rajya Sabha (Council of States) and the Lok Sabha (House of the People). The Council of Ministers is held responsible to the Lok Sabha.
[edit] State Government
States in India have their own elected governments, whereas Union Territories are governed by an administrator appointed by the president. Some of the state legislatures are bicameral, patterned after the two houses of the national parliament. The states' chief ministers are responsible to the legislatures in the same way the prime minister is responsible to parliament.
Each state also has a presidentially appointed governor who may assume certain broad powers when directed by the central government. The central government exerts greater control over the union territories than over the States, although some territories have gained more power to administer their own affairs. Local state governments in India have less autonomy compared to their counterparts in the United States and Australia.
[edit] Judicial branch
India's independent judicial system began under the British, and its concepts and procedures resemble those of Anglo-Saxon countries. The constitution designates the Supreme Court, the High Courts and the lower courts as the authority to resolve disputes among the people as well as the disputes related to the people and the government. The constitution through its articles relating to the judicial system provides a way to question the laws of the government, if the common man finds the laws as unsuitable for any community in India..
[edit] Local governance
Main article: Panchayati Raj
On April 24, 1993, the Constitutional (73rd Amendment) Act, 1992 came into force to provide constitutional status to the Panchayati Raj institutions. This Act was extended to Panchayats in the tribal areas of eight States, namely Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa and Rajasthan from 24 December 1996.
The Act aims to provide 3-tier system of Panchayati Raj for all States having population of over 2 million, to hold Panchayat elections regularly every 5 years, to provide reservation of seats for Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Women, to appoint State Finance Commission to make recommendations as regards the financial powers of the Panchayats and to constitute District Planning Committee to prepare draft development plan for the district.
[edit] Role of political parties
For other political parties see List of political parties in India. An overview on elections and election results is included in Elections in India.
As like any other democracy, political parties represent different sections among the Indian society and regions, and their core values play a major role in the politics of India. Both the executive branch and the legislative branch of the government are run by the representatives of the political parties who have been elected through the elections. Through the electoral process, the people of India choose which majority in the lower house, a government can be formed by that party or the coalition.
Indian state governments led by various political parties as of March 2009.
India has a multi-party system, where there are a number of national as well as regional parties. A regional party may gain a majority and rule a particular state. If a party represents more than 4 states then such parties are considered as national parties. In the 61 years since India's independence, India has been ruled by the Indian National Congress (INC) for 48 of those years. The party enjoyed a parliamentary majority barring two brief periods during the 1970s and late 1980s. This rule was interrupted between 1977 to 1980, when the Janata Party coalition won the election owing to public discontent with the controversial state of emergency declared by the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The Janata Dal won elections in 1989, but its government managed to hold on to power for only two years. Between 1996 and 1998, there was a period of political flux with the government being formed first by the right-wing nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) followed by a left-leaning United Front coalition. In 1998, the BJP formed the National Democratic Alliance with smaller regional parties, and became the first non-INC and coalition government to complete a full five-year term. The 2004 Indian elections saw the INC winning the largest number of seats to form a government leading the United Progressive Alliance, and supported by left-parties and those opposed to the BJP.
On 22 May 2004, Manmohan Singh was appointed the Prime Minister of India following the victory of the INC & the left front in the 2004 Lok Sabha election. The UPA now rules India without the support of the left front. Previously, Atal Bihari Vajpayee had taken office in October 1999 after a general election in which a BJP-led coalition of 13 parties called the National Democratic Alliance emerged with a majority.
Formation of coalition governments reflects the transition in Indian politics away from the national parties toward smaller, more narrowly-based regional parties. Some regional parties, especially in South India, are deeply aligned to the ideologies of the region unlike the national parties and thus the relationship between the central government and the state government in various states has not always been free of rancor. Disparity between the ideologies of the political parties ruling the centre and the state leads to severely skewed allocation of resources between the states.
[edit] Political issues
Main article: Socio-economic issues in India
See also: Corruption in India
[edit] Social issues
The lack of homogeneity in the Indian population causes division between different sections of the people based on religion, region, language, caste and race. This has led to the rise of political parties with agendas catering to one or a mix of these groups.
Some parties openly profess their focus on a particular group, for example, the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam's focus on the dravid population, and the Shiv Sena's pro-Marathi agenda. Some other parties claim to be universal in nature, but tend to draw support from particular sections of the population, for example, the Rashtriya Janata Dal (translated as National People's Party) has a vote bank among the Yadav and Muslim population of Bihar and the All India Trinamool Congress does not have any significant support outside West Bengal. The Bharatiya Janata Party, the party with the second largest number of MPs in the 15th Lok Sabha, has an image of being pro-Hindu, and anti-Muslim and anti-Christian. Such support from particular sections of the population affects the agenda and policies of such parties, and refute their claims of being universal representatives. The Congress may be viewed as the most secular party with a national agenda, however it also practices votebank politics to gain the support of minorities, especially Muslims, through appeasement and pseudo-secularist strategies.
The narrow focus and votebank politics of most parties, even in the central government and central legislature, sidelines national issues such as economic welfare and national security. Moreover, internal security is also threatened as incidences of political parties instigating and leading violence between two opposing groups of people is a frequent occurrence.
[edit] Economic issues
Economic issues like poverty, unemployment, development are main issues that influence politics. Garibi hatao (eradicate poverty) has been a slogan of the Indian National Congress for long. The well known Bharatiya Janata Party is looked upon with grace as a political party that is indeed encouraging to free market economy, businesses and others. The Communist Party of India (Marxist) vehemently supports left-wing politics and has strongly opposed to socio-economic policies such as globalization, capitalism, foreign investments and privatization. The economic policies of most other parties do not go much further than providing populist subsidies and reservations. As a noteworthy case, the manifesto of the Samajwadi Party, the third largest party in the 15th Lok Sabha, for the 2009 general elections promised to reduce the use of computers upon being elected.
[edit] Law and order
Just to name a few,terrorism , Naxalism, Religious violence and caste-related violence are important issues that affect the political environment of the Indian nation. Stringent anti-terror legislations like TADA, POTA and MCOCA have received much political attention, both in favour as well as criticism.
Law and order issues such as action against organized crime are not issues that affect the outcomes of elections. On the other hand, there is a criminal-politician nexus. Many elected legislators have criminal cases against them. In July 2008 Washington Times reported that nearly a fourth of the 540 Indian Parliament members faced criminal charges, "including human trafficking, immigration rackets, embezzlement, rape and even murder".[9]
[edit] See also
* | India portal |
[edit] Further reading
- W. Phillips Shively. 2008. Power and Choice: An Introduction to Political Science—Chapter 14 Example: Parliamentary Government in India" McGraw Hill Higher Education. ISBN 978-0-07-340391-5
- Leftism in India, 1917-1947; Satyabrata Rai Chowdhuri, Palgrave, U.K., 2007.
- Subrata K. Mitra and V.B. Singh. 1999. Democracy and Social Change in India: A Cross-Sectional Analysis of the National Electorate. New Delhi: Sage Publications. ISBN 81-7036-809-X (India HB) ISBN 0-7619-9344-4 (U.S. HB).
[edit] References
- ^ a b "Country profile: India". BBC. 9 January 2007. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/country_profiles/1154019.stm. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
- ^ a b "World's Largest Democracy to Reach One Billion Persons on Independence Day". United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. United Nations: Population Division. http://www.un.org/esa/population/pubsarchive/india/ind1bil.htm. Retrieved 6 December 2007.
- ^ "Country Profile: India" (PDF). Library of Congress - Federal Research Division. December 2004. http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/profiles/India.pdf. Retrieved 2007-06-24.
- ^ Bhambhri, Chandra Prakash (1992). Politics in India 1991-92. Shipra Publications. pp. 118, 143. ISBN 978-8185402178.
- ^ "Narasimha Rao passes away". The Hindu. http://www.hindu.com/2004/12/24/stories/2004122408870100.htm. Retrieved 2008-11-02.
- ^ Patrick Dunleavy, Rekha Diwakar, Christopher Dunleavy. "The effective space of party competition" (PDF). London School of Economics and Political Science. http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/government/PSPE/pdf/PSPE_WP5_07.pdf. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
- ^ Hermann, Kulke; Dietmar Rothermund (2004). A History of India. Routledge. p. 384. ISBN 978-0415329194.
- ^ a b A special report on India: The democracy tax is rising: Indian politics is becoming ever more labyrinthine December 11th 2008 The Economist
- ^ Wax, Emily (24 July 2008). "With Indian Politics, the Bad Gets Worse". Washington Times. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/07/23/AR2008072303390.html. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
[edit] External links
* | Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Politics of India |
- Outline of the Indian Government
- Official party websites:
- Official Indian National Congress Web Site
- Official Bharatiya Janata Party Web Site
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US economy still needs time to heal: Obama
5 Aug 2010, 2126 hrs IST,REUTERS
"We've still got a long way to go," Obama told workers at a Ford assembly plant in Chicago. "Our economy is not back to where it needs to be."
Raja orders action against unsolicited tele calls
An unsolicited telemarketing call to Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee is what it took Telecom Minister A Raja to swing into action for prohibiting immediately such intruding calls. ( Watch )Within hours of reports that Mukherjee himself was at the receiving end of such calls, Raja activated his ministry to take steps against such calls that "encroach" into the privacy of telecom consumers, an issue that has been haunting every single consumer despite the regulator TRAI's attempts to ban such a nuisance.
Raja has asked Telecom Secretary P J Thomas to convene a meeting and steps be taken to prohibit unsolicited calls immediately.
"A wide range of products and services are now a days offered through tele-marketing which result in inconvenience and disturbance to telecom consumers," Raja said in a note to the secretary.
During an interaction with political leaders to resolve the logjam on price rise debate in Parliament, Mukherjee on Monday got a call with loan offers from some company evoking a strong reaction from him.
Those present at the meeting said Mukherjee asked his aides to hand him the mobile, thinking it must be an important call.
However, he (Mukherjee) told the caller, "No, no. Not now. I am in a meeting."
Visibly angry, he handed over his mobile to Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs V Narayansamy.
When others asked who had called, an embarrassed Mukherjee said it was one of the finance companies, which had called to offer him a home loan.
He then said he gets four-five such calls everyday.
Spy Game: India readies cyber army to hack into hostile nations' computer systems
5 Aug 2010, 0016 hrs IST,Harsimran Singh & Joji Thomas Philip,ET BureauIT workers and ethical hackers who sign up for the ambitious project will be protected by law, says the proposal being discussed by senior government administrators. The expertise of these professionals will be used to go on the offensive or preempt strikes by breaching the security walls of enemy systems.
The strategy of taking the fight to hackers was drafted at a high-level security meet on July 29 chaired by National Security Advisor Shiv Shankar Menon. The meeting was attended by the director of Intelligence Bureau as well as senior officials of the telecom department, IT ministry and security agencies, documents seen by ET show. Departments whose officials were present at the meeting did not respond to ET emails.
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The government is worried about spying and sabotage from neighbouring countries, particularly China and Pakistan, after a spate of assaults on its computer systems in recent times. The Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto said in April that a clique of hackers based in China had conducted extensive spying operations in India, pilfering confidential documents from the defence ministry.
Though Beijing strongly denied any role in the attacks, the investigation pointed to the Chinese government's tacit approval of the spying operations. The technical reconnaissance bureau of the People's Liberation Army that is responsible for signals intelligence collection is headquartered in Chengdu, where the hackers had set up base.
According to the government proposal, the National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO) along with Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) will be responsible for creating cyber-offensive capabilities. NTRO is a key government agency that gathers technical intelligence while DIA is tasked with collating inputs from the Navy, Army and Air Force.
The NTRO will also suggest measures to ensure legal protection to recruits, a move that is expected to coax software professionals into joining the government group because under the Indian IT Act, hacking is punishable with imprisonment up to three years, or carries a fine up to `2 lakh, or both.
"Even if the offense is done on a computer on foreign soil, it is punishable under Indian laws," says cyber lawyer Pavan Duggal, adding that the IT Act will have to be changed for "patriotic stealth operations".
Mr Duggal welcomed the efforts to establish a hacker group, pointing to the explosive growth in assaults on Indian systems recently. Last year, 600 computers belonging to the external affairs ministry were hacked, allegedly by Chinese groups. The hackers also managed to steal crucial documents from the computers of the defence establishment then.
Vikas Desai, lead technical lead of network security firm RSA, said the government's efforts can be classified as ethical hacking. "Many countries and organisations in the world already have this kind of infrastructure," he said.
Games scam gets messier, Kalmadi aide Darbari sacked
5 Aug 2010, 1833 hrs IST,TNN NEW DELHI: A week after TV reports of a murky deal with London-based AM firm, IOA probe panel sacked Commonwealth Games Organising Committee joint director T S Darbari, a close aide of OC chief Suresh Kalmadi. The Left and BJP have, meanwhile, sought the ouster of Kalmadi. Earlier in the day, OC treasurer Anil Khanna resigned from the post in the wake of allegations that his son's firm had secured a contract for laying synthetic courts at a tennis stadium. A K Mattoo has been appointed the new treasurer. Khanna's resignation came hours before the OC's all-powerful executive board's emergency meeting convened to discuss the corruption scandal that has rocked the October 3-14 Games. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Corporate Exclusive: Mukesh Ambani, Subrata Roy eye Liverpool Duration: 02:10 Posted: 5 Aug, 2010, 1850 hrs IST CWG: Only games, no sport5 Aug 2010, 0554 hrs IST,SUMIT GULATI,ET BureauThe Holy Lord, a last-minute miraculous falling in place of things, a big stick, generous money flow and the rare coming together of the 'world famous in India' babudom will probably scrape us through the Commonwealth Games (CWG). The tragic, 'unHindi' movie ending to the tale is that India is unlikely to emerge the undisputed winner even if she successfully manages to wave off the last athlete into the final departing flight of an A-380 from the hopefully still swanky T3 terminal. But why then would India still be a loser ? The answer will be clear to those who saw the organisation of CWG in the country as the opportunity to start transforming the way India works. CWG presented India the great opportunity to overhaul its urban work processes and the way its big cities live and grow. This was the big takeaway from the Games. More flyovers, stadiums, wider roads and better pavements are the body, not the soul. By now, we know that many big athletes will be skipping the meet. But then, they were just an excuse to begin with. The idea was to use the event to transform the Capital into a modern, organised city that announces to the world that it is prepared to receive, assimilate and make fruitful use of the influences and investment that a fast-growing country like India will attract. The lessons of Delhi could then have been applied to other big and emerging cities. The way Delhi has gone about it shows how we have, once more, failed to catch the proverbial bus. Hopelessly-delayed construction projects show how the city has failed to adopt modern project management practices and technology that monitor and ensure timely execution of projects. It is absolutely clear that local bodies will continue to face delays in project execution even in works they undertake after the Games are over. So, did the city become efficient? Certainly not. This was also a golden opportunity for the Delhi government to reorganise, revitalise and rework its arms — get various urban municipal bodies in sync with each other's plans and projects. CWG was the just the perfect excuse to make our municipal bodies self-sustaining, citizen-friendly urban development centres. Without that, post-CWG, one arm of the Delhi government will continue to cut up a new road built by another arm to implement a project local people will find little use of. And, all of them will continue to beg the government for money for salaries even in 2011 and thereafter. Did we create a sustainable, mutually-beneficial municipal ecosystem ? Doesn't seem so. The software industry has given the country the image of an efficient, low-cost executioner of hi-tech projects. The Nano, on the other hand, has surprised the world with extraordinary innovation at a low cost. But Delhi has failed to imbibe the spirit. Ballooning Games bill is only indicative of how inefficiently money has been spent on projects with low RoI. Have we ensured that future projects in the city will balance development needs with aesthetics, environment friendliness and with cost? You know the answer. http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/opinion/comments--analysis/Commonwealth-Games-2010-Only-games-no-sport/articleshow/6259217.cms
Campus cry: No politics, please
Buddha's panel that will select the vice-chancellor of Presidency University — Amiya Bagchi, Sankar Pal and P.N. Ghosh — has evoked mixed reactions. Here's the buzz at ground zero. Where do you stand? Tell ttmetro@abpmail.com Sohail Abdi first year (history) The college appears impressive from outside but all's not well within Presidency. Politics is intrinsically linked to every aspect of the institution's functioning, hampering education. From what I have heard, the entire (search) team is Red-backed. They will possibly select someone with Left connections. Then where is the autonomy? We want someone who is devoid of political connections so that the mechanism of the university remains unhindered. Mohona Maitra first year (history) I am happy that Presidencians are dealing with the selection of the VC. Also, it is very important that we have an Presidencian as the head of the university. But what is even more important is that after Presidency becomes a university, teachers should be carefully selected. There are a large number of qualified Presidencians who can be brought in as teachers. There should be no political influence in the selection of teachers. Only then can quality of education be ensured at the new university. Urbi Patra second year (botany) I am happy with the selection committee and am confident that the members will appoint a deserving candidate as VC of Presidency University. We hope that the VC will ensure the induction of quality teachers, irrespective of whether they are ex-students of the college or not. We also hope that the VC will not change the basic nature of the institution. Souparno Adhikary third year (zoology) I am very pleased with the search committee. Each of them is successful in his field and brings to the panel the right mix of qualities — an administrator, an academician and another who is a mix of both. These are the qualities we want in a VC and the trio will be the right people to judge who is suitable. Also, the selected candidate must be a Presidencian. If the head is someone who knows the uniqueness of the institution, it will make a lot of difference to how the place is run. Tanmay Nattaburman PG-I (botany) We need a VC who knows the college inside out. Presidency has a lot of complications and I feel only a person who has been associated with the institution for a long time can sort things out. A former principal of the college would be a good choice as VC as he would know the pulse of the institution. Once the university starts functioning, students would be greatly benefited if the post-graduate courses being conducted off campus are taught on the College Street campus. We would also request the university administration to reserve seats for home students in PG courses. Kaushik Roy second year (Bengali) Those who have been given the task to select a VC are qualified people who have been undertaking both administrative and academic tasks for a long time. I am sure they will select someone who will ensure that the institution continues to listen to students' demands and needs. Bibaswan Basu third year (physiology) The students of Presidency College had been asking for autonomy for a very long time but our pleas fell on deaf ears. Now suddenly we are becoming a university. The decision made us suspicious and now our fears have been confirmed. Even students know that two of the members of the search committee are closely associated with the CPM. They will recruit for the party, defeating the very cause of autonomy. As a student, I want a pure academician as VC who will work for the institution and not toe any party line. Atanu Sinha Roy second year (English) All the three people in the search committee have political connections with the Left. The VC selection process should be completely apolitical. He or she should be purely an academician, not influenced either by Alimuddin Street or Kalighat. For that, if the Presidencian criterion has to be sacrificed then so be it. http://www.telegraphindia.com/1100805/jsp/frontpage/story_12773772.jsp
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