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Right to Education Bill September 3, 2009

Filed under: National Affairs — swapsushias @ 1:43 pm

Parliament passes landmark Right to Education Bill

PTI
Tuesday, August 4, 2009 20:55 IST

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New Delhi: Children will get the fundamental right to free and compulsory education with the passage of a bill, hailed as “historic”, by Parliament today.

The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Bill, 2008, seeks to provide education to children between the ages of six and 14 years.

The bill, one of the flagship programmes in the 100-day agenda of the United Progressive Alliance government, also earmarks 25% seats in private schools for poor children.

While the Rajya Sabha had passed the bill earlier, the Lok Sabha put its seal of approval today with human resources development minister Kapil Sibal describing it as the “harbinger of a new era” for children to meet the challenges of the 21st century.

Sibal said the bill is a “historic opportunity” for providing a better future to children of the country as there was never such landmark legislation in the 62 years since Independence.

“We as a nation cannot afford our children not going to schools,” he asserted, noting that the measure details the obligations of the Centre and the states for providing free and compulsory education to children.

The bill also seeks to do away with the practice of schools taking capitation fees before admission and subjecting the child or parents to any screening procedure.

Sibal said it would be up to the states to implement the policy of reservation in admissions.

Responding to members’ concern on the finances required for this gigantic task, he said a group is on the job and will give inputs to the 13th Finance Commission before its term gets over in October.

Sibal said the government has taken up a difficult task as it could not have waited any longer. He said the bill could become a reality only because of the inspiration of UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi and prime minister Manmohan Singh.

He said minority education institutions should also focus on giving education to the poor within the community.

Expressing dissatisfaction with the present system of examination, he said that at present the child has no choice but to take exams. The government, he said, is determined to end this system.

The bill seeks to achieve 10 broad objectives, which include free and compulsory education; an obligation on the part of the state to provide education; the nature of curriculum to be consistent with the Constitution; quality, focus on social responsibility, and obligation of teachers; and de-bureaucratisation in admissions.

The bill also provides for building up of neighbourhood schools in three years by the states. The HRD minister said the definition and location will be decided by the states.

 

The burden of injustice August 29, 2009

t is a shocking reflection on the flaws in our criminal justice system that less than one out of three people lodged in Indian jails is a convict. The vast majority of the prison population, as many as about 2.5 lakhs or 70 per cent, is made up of undertrials awaiting justice. As Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told the conference of Chief Ministers and Chief Justices, many of them have been in jail “for periods longer than they would have served had they been sentenced.” The Law Commission of India’s 78th report on the “Congestion of undertrial prisoners in jail,” submitted in 1979, also has a topical feel about it.

The situation today is not unlike what it was then — people languish in jail for the want of resources to seek bail, for the lack of proper legal aid, and the hopelessly sluggish pace at which the judicial system moves. Coupled with this is the presence of a police force that seems less interested in securing convictions than in making summary arrests, effectively using custody as a form of preventive detention.

If the problem of undertrials has proved so intractable, it is because it is a manifestation of fundamental and deep-rooted flaws in the criminal justice system.

The immediate task is to identify those who are eligible for bail and ensure their release. Under the Code of Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Act 2005, those accused of offences for which the death penalty is not prescribed are entitled to be released if they have been in detention for more than half the stipulated period of imprisonment. Also, the majority of the undertrial population is behind bars for petty offences and, by the Centre’s admission, “is under lock up in the absence of trial.”

Chief judicial magistrates have been asked by Chief Justice of India K.G. Balakrishnan to identify such cases and it is imperative that this exercise is carried out expeditiously so that these undertrials can be released on personal bonds. A more serious look at plea bargaining, introduced by the 2005 amendment for cases where the sentence is less than seven years, is called for. This could benefit many undertrials languishing in jails.

However, such immediate measures can address only a part of the problem. The fact that there is such a vast population of undertrials is closely linked to a larger issue — that of the lethargic pace of the criminal justice system, reflected in the world’s biggest backlog of pending cases. Dr. Manmohan Singh hit the nail on the head when he urged that “the expeditious elimination of this scourge… should constitute the highest priority for all of us.”

 

Union bill to make rain-water harvesting compulsory August 29, 2009

Filed under: current affairs,National Affairs — swapsushias @ 3:00 am

Special Correspondent

The Central Government will soon introduce a bill to make rain-water harvesting compulsory throughout the country. The bill is being fine tuned by the Ministry of Water Resources for its introduction in Parliament, said N.Vardraj, Regional Director, Central Ground Water Board, here on Friday.

Participating in a workshop on “Optimal utilisation of ground water resources by industry,” organised by the Confederation of Indian Industry, Southern Region, Dr.Vardraj said already rain water harvesting had been made compulsory in some States such as Tamil Nadu. The Government wanted to make RWH compulsory in all industries and big buildings throughout the country as it had good potential for conserving and recharging water resources. He appealed to industrial bodies such as Confederation of Indian Industry to sponsor community based RWHs for recharging water resources. He warned people against over-exploitation of ground water, especially near coastal areas.

S.Bhattacharya, Scientist, Central Ground Water Authority, said the Ministry of Water Resources was planning to introduce water credit similar to carbon credit to give incentive to those who conserve water. The Authority had formed a committee in coordination with the Oil and Natural Gas Commission (ONGC), which would work on the water credit concept. The committee had already submitted its preliminary report to the Ministry. It had also received suggestions from experts about the concept.

Sekhar Raghavan, director, Rain Centre, wanted revival of all traditional methods of rain water harvesting and people should learn to live with minimum use of water.

Chandu Nair, president and director, Scope e-knowledge, said there was need for an integrated management to sustain ground water.


 

Half of panchayat seats for women August 28, 2009

Filed under: current affairs,National Affairs — swapsushias @ 9:08 am


Failing On 33% Quota For Fairer Sex In House, UPA-2 Keeps Its Rural Promise

New Delhi: The country seems set to have an army of women politicians. UPA-2 may have failed to deliver on its promise of 33% reservation for women in legislatures within 100 days but it has kept its word on empowerment at the grassroots with the Union Cabinet on Thursday clearing a proposal to increase reservation for women to 50% in panchayats.

The proposal, reported by TOI earlier, aims to amend Article 243D of the Constitution that currently provides for 33% reservation for women in panchayats. This is proposed to be increased to 50%. The “women only” seats in panchayats are rotated.

States where 50% women’s quota is already in force has boosted their status. In Bihar, it has seen the spouses of women heads of panchayats styling themselves as ‘mukhiyapatis’ in a symbolic yet significant role reversal.

Panchayats are expected to serve as nurseries for women leaders, preparing them for tasks they may have to shoulder in case the addiction for politics endures.

It was during Rajiv Gandhi’s tenure as PM that the idea of decentralising power and empowering women at the grassroots was mooted. The one-third reservation for women in panchayats came through the 73rd constitutional amendment during PV Narasimha Rao’s tenure as Prime Minister.

The move will at one stroke boost the number of women politicians at the grassroots as the experience of Bihar — the first state to reserve half of the panchayat seats for women — shows — making the administration more gender-sensitive.

Taking the lead in women empowerment, five states — Bihar, Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh — already have 50% reservation for women as states have the power to bring in amendments in their state laws to increase women’s representation up to 50%. Rajasthan has also announced 50% reservation that will be implemented in the next panchayat election in early 2010. Kerala, too, has announced 50% reservation for women in panchayats and other local bodies.

In Uttarakhand, women have an overwhelming 55% representation in panchayats as many of them contested even from non-reserved seats and won. But the state works through the UP Panchayat Act and is yet to have its own law.

With the proposed constitutional amendment, the number of elected women’s representatives at the grassroot level is expected to rise to more than 14 lakh. At present, women account for 36.87% of the total 28.1 lakh elected panchayat representatives.

I&B minister Ambika Soni said after the Union Cabinet meeting that a proposal to have 50% quota for women in urban local bodies is likely to be taken up later.

Panchayati raj minister CP Joshi called Thursday’s decision as historic saying it would take empowerment of women to another level.

All India Democratic Women Association general secretary Sudha Sundararaman said, “This will facilitate increased participation of women in decision making and strengthen the democratic process. But this measure must be followed up with the passage of the women’s reservation Bill in Parliament.”

 

ISSUES INVOLVED IN IMPLEMENTING COMPULSORY PRIMARY EDUCATION IN INDIA August 25, 2009

Filed under: National Affairs,Social Issue — swapsushias @ 6:00 am
Despite recent hype over the Right to Education Bill making it mandatory for the Central, state and local bodies to provide free and compulsory education to all the children in the 6-14 years age group, the real scenario of elementary education in India is pathetic.Below are some of issues which make free and compulsory education in India a mammoth task.

1. Inadequacy of Financial Provision:Due to over expenditure in defense,foreign debt,meeting natural disasters among others, the expenditure for education in the central level comes down.

2. Poverty Among Parents:Education in undeveloped areas still considered as a luxury because of financial constraints of the parents.

3.Indifference of Parents:An illiterate parent is generally averse to education.Again,
children from educated families climb the educational ladder more successfully than those from uneducated families.This develops antipathy in uneducated parents towards education.

4.Inappropriateness of Curricula:The primary school curricula vary from State to State.The school curriculum in each of the States is almost centrally-controlled. There are prescribed syllabi, textbooks etc., irrespective of diversities in languages and dialects spoken by the people and geographical differences. Besides, such curricula do not give independence to teachers to make variations depending on local needs, which makes them ineffective.

5.Ineffectiveness of Teachers:Lack of effectiveness among teachers takes root at the time of teacher training. In spite of the known effects of teacher training on efficiency of teachers, most developing countries have poor teacher training programmes.Such training programmes in India are also farcical in nature.

6.Inertia in Administrative and Supervisory Machinery:The inertia prevailing among administrators and supervisors has its origin in a faulty recruitment system.The inertia prevailing in the system is responsible for ill-distribution of available resources. Such problems get further accentuated because of the multitude of languages and dialects.

Universalization of primary education is intimately connected with the development of living conditions of the people. When a significant number of citizens are below the poverty line, the attempts made to provide free and compulsory education to children in the age group 6-14 cannot be successful in the near future. There are, in addition, certain educational and administrative bottlenecks that have been decelerating the process.Efforts therefore are to be made for complete revamping of the system both at micro and macro levels, so as to make free education a reality and not a myth in India.

 

INDIA’S ‘POWER’: WEAKNESS=VIRTUE, STRENGTH=IMMORALITY August 23, 2009

Filed under: ESSAY,INTERNATIONAL,National Affairs — swapsushias @ 1:00 pm


The uprising in Tibet is the latest in a long series of developments in India’s neighbourhood that has exposed India’s congenital inability and lack of desire to get itself to be counted as even a small player, forget a major one, in the region.

The ongoing protests against Chinese oppression in Tibet have seen India bend twice over backwards like a little nation so that the Chinese are not annoyed at all. All the cacophony about “morality” that accompanies other developments to influence India’s response – national interest be damned – is conspicuous by its almost total absence. This time, it is neither morality nor national interest which is determining India’s official and even media response to what China has been doing in Tibet for 60 years.

This time, it is an unashamed, unacknowledged acknowledgement of the utter relative weakness, not economic but military, that India has allowed itself to sink into vis a vis China. It is that unaddressed asymmetry and the terrifying fear of a Chinese retaliation to forcefully settle their long held claim over Arunachal Pradesh which has forced the country into pushing its lofty moral stances under a very dirty rug,

But, weakness somehow manages to find the strangest of moral ruses. There are voices comparing Tibet with, would you believe it, Kashmir and even the North East to justify the prostration to the Chinese! We conveniently like to forget many inconvenient truths. Had India wanted, for example, it could have claimed Myanmar with nearly the same justification that China has claimed and taken Tibet.

Tibetans do not claim Arunachal Pradesh; the Chinese do, on their behalf! The Dalai Lama has been driven out of his country by the invading Chinese; in Indian Kashmir, Kashmiri Hindus have been driven out by fellow Kashmiri and Pakistani Muslims! But, for the most dishonest of “moral” reasons, we gag the Dalai Lama and praise the Chinese who use the foulest of words for this apostle of peace to avoid talking to him; we pretend that homeless Kashmiri Pandits don’t exist and give enormous respect, time, importance, understanding and sympathy to the masters of AK47 wielding killers fielded by Pakistan to usurp Kashmir.

Last year, when the military junta in powerless Myanmar was facing a revolt from monks, ‘conscience keepers’ of India were up and awake, berating India for not taking the side of the monks. Very few were then concerned that India had already lost much ground to an aggressive and focused China and that any abrupt reaction against the junta would drive Myanmar almost totally into the arms of that country. It did not matter to them that the Chinese were working steadily to get a very easy route through Myanmar into the plains of Assam, to cut off and capture most of Arunachal Pradesh, whenever they decide to, with ease. All that mattered to them was the “morality” of supporting democracy in Myanmar and the unacceptability of supporting military dictatorship. National interest? That is all bunkum, said one illustrated TV personality.

Exactly the opposite happened when the Musharraf, the General responsible for occupying parts of Kargil, overthrew a democratically elected government in a military coup. Then there was no moral outcry, no calls to break ties with the military regime that had launched an attack on India and show solidarity with the forces of democracy. On the contrary, the practical voice which was most heard was that we had to do business with whoever was in power in Pakistan. The moral brigade was in fact the first to forgive the General and begin a long lasting “love affair’” with him. Was all this due to an enlightened understanding of national interest or was it because of something more fundamental and disturbingly so?

Ever since India gained Independence thanks mainly to the moral force of Mahatma Gandhi’s words and actions rather than any conventional force, India has fancied itself as a global moral voice, a sort of continuation of the Mahatma’s legacy. Gandhi’s morality and non violence had no space for “weakness” at all. It was the unusual actuation of great, uncompromising strength which did not need any weapons. Indeed, in retrospect, it is clear that that was the only strength which could have defeated the British; militarily there was just no chance.

In Independent India, unfortunately, somewhere that concept has got seriously distorted. The reality of global power play of nations has simply not been grasped fully in its harsh, violent and ambitious dimensions, despite many rude wake-up calls. There is a peculiar paralysis when it comes to talking about and with strength.

In fact, in India, we weirdly hyphenate strength with immorality; it is not something to be sought or flaunted. Unfortunately, that has become our national ethos. Being macho might be fine for the Americans and the Chinese, but that is not the arrogant path that India should tread. On the flip side, great virtue is associated with weakness, as if only the weak and the meek tread the moral path. Perhaps that is true, for the weak often have little choice, as confronting the strong will lead to only one result. You can keep calling the possession and use of strength by any uncharitable epithet to justify your weakness; if you succumb to it, as India has done almost always done since 1947, except in 1971, the moral part is nothing more than a camouflage to fool you own countrymen and even yourself!

Why has this state come about? Is it because at some level we are still in the mental frame that we got into to drive the British out of the country? Then the moral question was straightforward: the colonial foreigner had no right to rule over this vast land. He knew that too.

However, for an independent country aspiring to be one of the great nations of the world, the questions are many more and far more complex. Morality cannot be the determinator that will make an aggressor see your reason. Nor is it a workable tool to take a practical view of the globe in which countries fight essentially by the rules of the jungle when it comes to the crunch. Only the fittest have survived till now; there is every reason to believe that might will continue to be almost always right in future too.

The Americans know this elementary stuff. So do the Chinese, who are working furiously to ensure that they too get securely into the “right” lane of might which the US has made all its own. Indians, despite being thrice as many as Americans and almost as many as Chinese on this planet, just don’t seem to get it. We want to continue to make believe that we are in a separate lane all of our own and claim that our weak moral lane is the right one which will not be challenged by those in the lanes of might! This strategy is probably the only practical one which will work for, say, Fiji, Mauritius, Tonga, Cuba and the like. Not for a country that is almost a sub continent.(जरा सोचिये )_

This raises another question. Does India have no world view commensurate with its size and strategic importance? Has India not yet woken up to its role, responsibility and power as India the nation? Does it still continue to think small and react like those hundreds of pre-British era kingdoms whose tiny world view virtually ended at the boundaries of their little kingdoms? Or does India still view itself as the age old spiritual and cultural entity it has been rather than the huge political reality that it is today in a world whose map has been, and will continue to be, shaped by power and force, no matter what Indian “delusionists” may tell you?

India’s internal political, bureaucratic and social dynamics are clearly dominated by forces trying to cut up the country into smaller and smaller “estates” and groups whose vested interests they champion as supreme, no matter what happens to the country. The few voices trying to take a larger, holistic national view are invariably drowned out by the force, even blackmail, of small pressure groups fiercely protecting their small turfs.

That is another reason why there is very little serious national political debate, awareness and interest in matters related to foreign policy and India’s engagement with its neighbours. Whatever little there is, is concerned mostly about the effect that any action or response will have on the many constituencies that we have created in babudom and the society. This is the effete and self destructive “soft power” that India projects to the world, garnished with immoral morality.

India is the prime real estate that has been most invaded and attacked in the history of all of mankind. It should, therefore, have logically been most alive to and concerned about the challenges that it faces or may face in future to its standing, interests and even existence. It was the country’s economic prosperity and its riches that had repeatedly attracted invaders in the past. Emboldened by the total lack of organized vision and strength, and the prevalence of petty and destructive internal divisions, they were able to achieve easy victories, often with a smaller force.

With so many historical lessons to learn from, including those received after Independence, India should have been fully committed to addressing the mistakes of the past so that history does not repeat itself. But, it is a matter of serious concern that nearly the same weaknesses continue to mark national response to the challenges that the country faces from its aggressive and hostile neighbours, forget the rest of the world.

When are we going to learn what we should have learnt many years ago? Even as China demonstrates its unflinching resolve to aggressively protect its national interest and bullies us into meek submission, there is nothing to suggest that we are even thinking about where we have gone wrong to find ourselves so belittled again, and where we should go from here.

The paralysis appears to be almost complete and irreversible. Perhaps it will take the US to get India to show some movement and spine befitting its size and potential strength. It will do that not because of any moral love for India, but because it will see for India in America’s national interest what India should have seen on its own!

 

CIVIL SERVICES BILL 2009 August 23, 2009

Filed under: current affairs,gk,Govt. Schemes,National Affairs — swapsushias @ 12:51 pm


CIVIL SERVICES BILL 2009: THE SILENT CIVILIAN COUP

India’s first Prime Minister’s self-confessed biggest failure is now set to become complete surrender. In the 21st century, instead of putting in place a contemporary and responsive bureaucratic set up, India is on the verge of making its dysfunctional colonial babudom that Nehru wanted to dismantle but could not, even more unaccountable and powerful than it was during the Raj.

So dangerous is going to be the result of a proposal under consideration that it is surprising that there are no voices being raised against it. Perhaps that itself is an indication of the power and reach of India’s babus even today.

Let us get some basic things straight. This country is meant to governed by political leaders who are chosen by the people, the real sovereigns, to whom they are accountable. In effect, Chief Minister are CEOs of their states while the PM is the CEO of the whole nation. All organs of the government, including the IAS and IPS that are about to give a fatal punch to this fundamental concept, are no more than changeable instruments that exist solely to assist these CEOs to do their jobs efficiently and effectively.

As it is, thanks to the colonial bureaucracy that frustrated and defeated even a tall leader like Nehru, these CEOs have only a very small pool of talent from which they can select individuals who can faithfully execute their plans and projects. Unlike in modern countries like the US, a PM cannot, for example, appoint a Cabinet Secretary of his choice; he has to pick from less than half a dozen IAS officers who fall in that seniority bracket. The same constraint is faced by CMs in states. They all have to appoint generalist babus of the IAS cadre alone to head the secretarial support staff in all departments. Due to this constraint that will be unacceptable in any modern and responsive administration anywhere in the world, over time, the IAS cadre has become extremely powerful.

As things stand today, all that an individual has to do is get through one Civil Services exam. After that, he need not do anything at all. The system has been systematically sabotaged in such a manner that he will rise to a very high rank and retire a very rich man. Unless he does something criminally unacceptable and is caught and convicted, he is set for life. There is no pyramid; it has been turned into a vertical cylinder. And the very few who do not reach the rank of Additional Secretary are assured many other usurped and lucrative alternative options, including in the public sector.

In addition, having successfully sidelined the military and other professions and cadres from all top positions in the government, the babus – and that includes IPS officers who think they are IAS guys in uniform and not the cops that they are meant to be – are now all set to push even politicians aside. As it is, most politicians, having never worked a day in their lives in a result-oriented organisation, are led by the babus who make them take most decisions that the babus want. So much is the control execised by these babus that, often, decisions pushed through against their wishes are simply not implemented till the minister changes, after which in any case they do not need to be. All this and more will get exposed if the notings on files are made available under the RTI. That is why they are opposing that proposal so strongly.

See the trick and the dysfunctional aberration here? Babus wield the real power already; they compel politicians to take most decisions due to their written recommendations which, unless a minister is well-informed and strong, are accepted. But, the babus don’t want to be held accountable for them in any manner. The accountability has to rest with the political decision making authority alone.

There is no doubt that responsibility and accountability of the government has to rest with leaders chosen by people to lead them. If that be so, then, it logically follows that such leaders should have the freedom to choose and appoint the secretarial staff and professionals to help them do so. Unfortunately, over the years, politicians have not covered themselves with glory and some have actually gone berserk in misusing their powers.

The deterioration in the quality of political leadership is a matter of serious concern and measures need to be taken to correct it. But that should be done by politicians at the political end. However, what the unresponsive bureaucracy that is effectively not accountable to anyone, is trying now is insidious and dangerous. In the garb of “insulating” IAS and IPS officers from politicians, it is taking the country backwards in colonial time. Let no one be under any illusion that if the proposed Civil Services Bill 2009 is passed, bureaucrats, who are essentially no more than secretarial support staff to leaders, will become even more powerful than the leaders chosen by the people.

The world has not yet seen “collective dictatorship” of the kind that India is in the danger of being taken over by. If this bill goes through, India’s colonial bureaucrats, including those in khakis, will go almost totally beyond the pale of control of even the elected, and will become the nation’s real rulers without being answerable to its people in any manner whatsoever.

Look at some proposals included in the bill:

  • A new Civil Public Service Authority (CPSA) will be established to “professionally manage” civil services (IAS and IPS) and serve the interests of babus and citizens. The CPSA will aid and advise the government in all matters concerning the organisation, control, operation and management of public services and servants. It will also frame public service codes to facilitate babus in discharging official duties with competence and accountability, care and diligence; responsibility, honesty, objectivity and impartiality; without discrimination and in accordance with the law.
  • The rank of the Chairman of the CPSA will be equivalent to the CEC and he will be appointed by a committee comprising the PM, HM, Leader of the Opposition and a Supreme Court Judge. The Cabinet Secretary will be the convener of the CPSA.
  • The Cabinet Secretary, Chief Secretaries and DGPs will selected out of a panel by the PM/CM, HM and the Leader of the opposition.
  • The new rules also give enough importance to performance parameters of officers considered for top posts.
  • All bureaucrats will have fixed tenure of three years and will have to be compensated for inconvenience and harassment if moved out earlier.
  • If the government deviates from these norms, it will have to inform the Parliament about the reasons for doing so.
  • These rules apply only to IAS and IPS officers only. Civil servants of other ‘inferior cadres’ will remain under the thumbs of these cadres as before.
Can you see what is being cleverly slid in?
  • The taking away of powers of appointment from the PM/CM and involving the Leader of the Opposition in the process will simply erode executive authority and eventually ensure that the political leadership will be left with no choice but to pick the senior most officer declared eligible for the job by the CPSA. This means that even when people vote out a government because it has failed to deliver, the new government will be forced to work with the same permanent team of not-accountable-to-anyone babus who ran the failed administration that was rejected by the people. What is this going to lead to, as even an uneducated person can tell you? Even more sloth, unaccountability and colonial arrogance of the sort not seen for 62 years.
  • As of now, the only real power that political leaders have over babus is that of transfer, particularly to lucrative appointments, because babus have already played havoc with organisational hierarchy to ensure promotions up to the near-top level, irrespective of performance (this talk of changing the system of evaluation is no more than a red herring to hijack control). If tenures are fixed at three years, the above-the-government CPSA is empowered to question it, the government has to give reason to the Parliament for moving someone out early and the concerned official has to be compensated for it, then it means that a political leader will invariably be stuck with the same failed officials (even politically inconvenient ones, rightly or wrongly) till their tenures are over. As a result, these already unaccountable officials will become the real masters wherever they are, without being answerable to any body and without any fear whatsoever of anyone other than their equally unaccountable cadre superiors.
  • Presently, the Cabinet Secretary is the senior most bureaucrat who reports to the PM and who can be appointed and removed by India’s CEC at will. After the bill is passed, the Chairman of the CPSA will become the Supreme Leader of India’s bureaucrats, the babus‘ Ayatollah, as it were. He will not only be totally out of control of the government but will actually become a superior, independent authority that can question any decision of the political leadership in the states and the Centre in all matters concerning postings, promotions and issuance of orders in accordance with the law.
In short, what India’s colonial bureaucrats are attempting now is a silent but deadly civilian coup. IAS and IPS, the anachronistic and dysfunctional cadres that belong to the 19th century, have already grown overwhelmingly powerful in the last sixty two years by infiltrating into and usurping control of all the powerful wings of the government and quasi government organs and bodies. This regression has led to a situation where they are now not willing to submit even to the ultimate people-empowered authority of the political leadership.

The Civil Services Bill 2009 is, in sum, nothing but a cleverly concealed attempt designed to take away most of the few remaining powers that politicians exercise over India’s bureaucrats belonging to the IAS and IPS, and make them the de facto rulers of this country, accountable to no one at all. If the bill goes through, India’s democracy will effectively be dead in a few years.

MORAL OF THE STORY
You and I may keep voting politicians in and out of power. That will not effect the government at all. No matter who is in power and who is out, the real writ that will prevail will be of India’s civil servants; that autonomous tail will wag all political dogs voted to power by the people of this country.

 

Scam in power purchase : downside of privatisation August 23, 2009

Filed under: IN HINDI,National Affairs — swapsushias @ 12:38 pm

This is big now a days , not only in MP but in many states. Problem stems from various factors :

1. competitive electoral politics of giving 24 hour electricity at election time even if power plants are not producing enough forcing boards to make open market purchases at exorbitant rates.

2. A complete apathy by public representatives to working of electricity regulatory commission and fixing of tariff. In Indore none of MLA or MP even bothers to attend public hearing.

3. No new power projects in private or government sector except indira sagar in last 20 years.

4. Huge scale pilferage and non recovery of bills and politicians who are responsible for under investment in generation and transmission support all such elements here thus harming electricity board twice.

5. Absence of well developed power trading mechanism in country.

6. Our fetish for IAS officers. They man regulatory body, they run electricity board ( why not people having experience of running utilities, they do the trading on power exchange also , why not MBAs from IIM ? ) result an inefficient, incapable, unresponsive and costly utility.

Economic survey of this yea shows that MP has second highest tariff in India and which in part explains why big industries are so shy of our state.

भोपाल। बिजली खरीदी में अनियमितताओं की शिकायत पर लोकायुक्त ने तीन विद्युत वितरण कंपनियों को नोटिस जारी कर उनसे जवाब मांगा है।

लोकायुक्त जस्टिस पीपी नावलेकर ने नागरिक उपभोक्ता मंच द्वारा इस संबंध में की गई शिकायत की सुनवाई करते हुए मंगलवार को यह नोटिस जारी किया। मामले की अगली सुनवाई आगामी सात सितंबर को भोपाल में निर्धारित की गई है। मंच द्वारा लोकायुक्त के समक्ष की गई शिकायत में कहा गया था कि वर्ष 2005 से वर्ष 2008 के बीच इन वितरण कंपनियों द्वारा 1770 करोड़ रुपए की अल्पकालीन बिजली खरीद में केवल नियमों की अनदेखी की गई, बल्कि भारी भ्रष्टाचार भी किया गया। शिकायत में कहा गया कि खरीदी गई बिजली में पारदर्शिता का पालन नहीं किया गया, खरीदी के लिए नियामक आयोग से अनुमति नहीं ली गई तथा बिना निविदा के महंगी दर पर बिजली खरीदी गई। लोकायुक्त ने नोटिस जारी कर तीनों कंपनियों से जवाब मांगा है।

मामले की अगली सुनवाई सात सितंबर को भोपाल में होगी। उल्लेखनीय है कि विद्युत दरों से संबंधित टैरिफ की घोषणा के समय पत्रकारों ने नियामक आयोग के अध्यक्ष से भी बिजली खरीदी को लेकर सवाल किया था। उन्होंने बताया था कि 2006-07 में खरीदी गई बिजली में अनियमितता पाए जाने पर आयोग ने 1100 करोड़ से अधिक की स्वीकृति नहीं दी थी।

उनका कहना था कि चालू साल में खरीदी का ब्योरा अभी नियामक आयोग के सामने नहीं आया, यह मामला जब उनके सामने आएगा तो देखेंगे। दरअसल बिजली खरीदी को लेकर सरकार पर विधानसभा चुनावों के बाद से ही आरोप लग रहे हैं। शिकायत है कि चुनावों के मद्देनजर मतदाता नाराज हों, इसलिए उस समय तो महंगी बिजली खरीदी गई, लेकिन उसके बाद नहीं। इसकी वजह से बिजली संकट बरकरार है। सामान्य तौर पर भी बिजली खरीदी को लेकर अनियमितताओं की शिकायत है।

 

India – US Nuke agreement – update August 19, 2009


Visiting U.S. Secretary of State will be the unveiling of a new strategic dialogue architecture and the signing of an agreement to facilitate the launch of U.S. satellites and satellites with U.S. components on Indian launch vehicles.

The new dialogue architecture is intended to take Indo-U.S. relations to a higher level, 3.0 — to use Ms. Clinton’s phrase — and will cover areas like nonproliferation, security, education, health and development.

The new Technology Safeguards Agreement (TSA) to be signed will cover launches involving satellites owned by U.S. government or academic institutions or by third country space agencies and universities which have U.S. equipment on board. Since the components and satellites will have to be integrated with ISRO’s launch vehicles, the TSA will provide for monitoring by the U.S. side to ensure against diversion or misuse of equipment.

The agreement to be signed will be an umbrella one — similar to the TSA that China and the U.S. signed — with individual licensing by the State Department likely dispensed with, but India will not yet be able to enter the lucrative market for the launch of U.S. commercial satellites or third country commercial satellites with U.S. components till a separate Commercial Space Launch Agreement (CSLA) is signed.

A second agreement will also be signed on a framework for “robust result-oriented cooperation” in science and technology for “collaborative research and its commercialisation.”This agreement will build on the October 2005 Science and Technology Cooperation Agreement.

 

MS in education tie-up with Maharashtra August 19, 2009

Filed under: current affairs,National Affairs,Science And Tech — swapsushias @ 6:29 am

Special Correspondent

Microsoft India on Tuesday signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Maharashtra Government to enhance ICT (IT, communications and telecommunications) adoption in schools and build employability readiness skills of the future workforce.

Under the agreement, besides the academies in Pune, Nagpur and Aurangabad, Microsoft will help build last mile capacity among educators.

10-day training module

One educator from each cluster in the State will be required to undergo a 10-day training module in a classroom setup; and each of the trained resources can then further build ICT readiness among other educators in the cluster.

Microsoft will conduct over 200 sessions at the district level in the next two years.

At a conference attended by Maharashtra Chief Minister Ashok Chavan, Microsoft India Managing Director Rajan Anandan said,

“three years ago, we entered into MoUs with 10 States to set up 11 academies for providing teachers with ICT skills. Since then Microsoft has imparted training to 3.60 lakh teachers across the States with 92,000 being in Maharashtra.”

The initiative will also focus on building employability readiness among students of 11th and 12th classes. Also planned is the development of a single login through Microsoft’s Live@Edu initiative, which will enable students and teachers across about 85,000 schools in the State to acquire email and school-specific domains.In addition, one of the biggest highlights of the agreement will be the introduction of Microsoft’s global programme, DreamSpark, under which a student can get access to the suite of Microsoft Software Development tools at no cost.

 

 
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