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Govt takes in-principle decision to ban all construction on Ganga



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Govt takes in-principle decision to ban all construction on Ganga

Water Resources Secretary Shashi Shekhar has been given a month’s time to conclude the committee’s report so as to apprise the Supreme Court of the government’s final decision at the next hearing on January 20.


Written by Amitav Ranjan 

The Union Cabinet in May approved Rs 20,000 crore for use over the next five years for the flagship Namami Gange, which integrates the efforts to clean and protect the river in a comprehensive manner. (Source: PTI)

To maintain the river’s minimum environmental flow and protect the ecology dependent on it, no new construction would be allowed on river Ganga or any of its tributaries.
The decision was taken in principle last month at an Inter Ministerial Group (IMG) meeting to review an Expert Body report giving clearance to hydroelectric power (HEP) projects to be built on Alaknanda and Bhagirathi river basins in Uttarakhand.
Sources said a formal ban on construction would be conveyed to the Supreme Court after an IMG-constituted committee submits its “comprehensive view” on all aspects of environment flow and longitudinal connectivity in the two rivers, along with authentic figures of water availability.
The IMG — comprising Water Resources Minister Uma Bharti, Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar and Power Minister Piyush Goyal — formed the five-member committee chaired by Water Resources Secretary Shashi Shekhar, who has trashed the Expert Body report on giving clearance to five of the six HEP projects.
Shekhar told the IMG that the requirement of environmental flow and longitudinal connectivity, as recommended by the Expert Body, was “grossly inadequate”. “It will leave these rivers with almost no water during non-monsoon season,” he told the ministers.
Shekhar has been given a month’s time to conclude the committee’s report so as to apprise the Supreme Court of the government’s final decision at the next hearing on January 20.
Sources said the IMG is also agreed on refunding the money invested by project promoters and has asked the Power Ministry to “make available latest figures of expenditure on six HEPs, including the contractors’ pending claims”.
According to sources, Bharti has offered to compensate the six HEPs — NTPC’s Lata Tapavan, NHPC’s Kotlibhel IA, GMR’s Alaknanda, Super Hydro’s Khirao Ganga and Bhyunder Ganga and THDC’s Jelam Tamak — out of the Namami Gange funds.

The Union Cabinet in May approved Rs 20,000 crore for use over the next five years for the flagship Namami Gange, which integrates the efforts to clean and protect the river in a comprehensive manner.


Bharti, also the minister for Ganga Rejuvenation, is upset that the Environment Ministry filed the affidavit based on the Expert Body report in the apex court without consulting her ministry, even though the determination and maintenance of minimum environmental flow in Ganga and its tributaries was one of the “important mandates” of her ministry.
“Though chief engineer of Central Water Commission working under this ministry was included as technical organisation expert (in the Expert Body), CWC is not competent organisation to give opinion regarding e-flow and longitudinal connectivity,” she wrote to Javadekar.
After the 2013 Uttarakhand floods, the court took cognizance of the tragedy and prohibited setting up of any new HEP in the state till further orders. In December 2014, it asked the Environment Ministry to consider the six HEPs in a cluster for which a four-member committee was set up.
The four-member committee in February 2015 said “these six projects in their present form may not be taken up as they have potential of causing significant impacts on the bio-diversity, river system, wildlife and other fragile eco-systems in areas where these projects are located due to altered hydrological parameters”.
The court then asked the ministry to submit its final recommendations on the six projects through an Expert Body. The Expert Body in October overturned the previous recommendations.
HINDU, DEC 8, 2015

India to have 8 new observatories
India on Monday announced a programme to open eight more long-term ecological observatories to study the effects of climate change.

The new facilities under the Indian Long Term Ecological Observatories (I-LTEO) would assess the health of eight different biomes (types of habitat) and come up with long-term research findings on the changes there that were happening due to climate change.

It will cover the Western Himalayas to Western Ghats, Eastern Himalayas to Andaman and Nicobar islands, central India to the Sundarbans, and from Jammu and Kashmir to Rajasthan and Gujarat.

Monitoring for 30 years

Launching the programme at the climate conference CoP21, Minister for Environment, Forests and Climate Change, Prakash Javadekar said the research facility of the Indian Institute of Science at Mudumalai in the Western Ghats had been monitoring a 50-hectare plot for 30 years and mapping observations to climate change.



Flora and fauna

The I-LTEO would scientifically monitor flora and fauna to assess how climate change is affecting “natural and closely associated human systems in agriculture and pastoralism,” a Ministry publication released on the occasion said.

The new facilities under ILTEO will assess the health of eight different biomes

STATESMAN, DEC 9, 2015



It isn’t even odd to work from home

Govind Bhattacharjee

We are literally inhaling poison in Delhi. I do not normally have a sinus or coughing problem, and I am highly exercise-dependent for my mental and physical well-being. But every year during the three winter months, I do not dare to venture out for taking a walk or jogging, even though I live in an area that is reasonably green. During the dismal winter months of Delhi, I keep myself hermetically sealed within the four walls of my house, refusing to step out except for an emergency and barking at anyone who dares to open any window.

But this year, none of this is helping me. I have a blocked nose, sore throat, sleepless nights and what naturally follows as a consequence, a depressed and sterile mind. Same with my wife, and you can well imagine what happens when two depressed souls are locked within a house that increasingly resembles a gaol in a city that the Delhi High Court had aptly described as a “gas chamber”.

So it was cheerful news that at last the AAP government had focussed its attention away from the Lt. Governor towards the Aam Admi of Delhi for a change. Alarmed by the rising air pollution that has assumed unseemly proportions with no one having any clue about how to combat it, the Delhi Government has announced its intention to allowing the plying of private vehicles bearing odd and even registration numbers to alternate days only in the national capital from 1 January 2016. A motorist will now be able to drive his vehicle only for 15 days in a month. 

Several other measures were announced along with this, like shutting down the Badarpur Thermal power station, moving the National Green Tribunal to close the Dadri power plant in Uttar Pradesh, carrying out a massive plantation drive along all arterial roads across the city to curb the spread of dust and vacuum-cleaning of roads by the PWD from April, besides allowing trucks into the city only after 11 pm. If only even half these intentions could be translated into actions rather than being exercises in tokenism, the city indeed would be a different place to live in, instead of the lethal toxic cocktail that it is at present.

The odd/even number scheme is nothing new. Cities like Beijing and Singapore have already tried it. The question is whether it is practicable in Delhi, where the public transport is clearly unequipped to carry the additional load. Thankfully, It would not restrict the Chief Minister’s movements who has two cars numbered 0001 and 0002, or the rich people who can afford to buy a second vehicle - usually a used one - to beat the scheme and thereby contributing to increasing, rather than reducing vehicular pollution. As always, it will be the Aam Admi the Government wants to help who will be hurt the most. 

It is still unclear how the scheme will be implemented, what would be penalty on violators and how it will be enforced, or how the government would regulate the vehicles coming from outside. Considering all these, the scheme seems not to have been thought through. It looks more like a knee-jerk reaction; for a scheme like this to succeed, all stakeholders including the public had to be taken on board beforehand, which obviously was not the case.

A scheme like this can at best be a quick fix rather than a permanent solution, as experiences of different cities across the world prove. Beijing used it for the first time during the 2008 Olympic Games. It did curb its notorious smog level by 20 per cent, the concentration of PM 2.5 (fine, respirable particles) by 31 per cent and asthma-related doctor visits by 50 per cent. Now the ban is enforced for only a day every week, and it restricts not one but two last digits - one odd and one even - say 3 and 4 -  so that to beat the scheme, one has to have a third vehicle carrying a different number. 

 In 1989, Mexico City started its Hoy No Circula (today you can’t drive) programme based on the even-odd formula to fight smog, which only resulted in giving a boost to the automobile sector, sharply increasing the vehicle sales. Bogota’s Pico y Placa (Peak and [License] Plate) programme reduced private vehicle use by up to 40 per cent on weekdays, but the effect on the city’s pollution was only marginal. For a scheme like this to succeed, we also need an effective system of public transportation which is just not in place in most of our cities.

Other cities have tried other methods linked to pricing which are more effective, but may not be palatable in a country with a baggage of socialistic pattern of society and a history of the dole culture practiced and promoted as national welfare. Transport Demand Management methods linked to pricing  like parking restrictions and congestion pricing have accrued long term benefits rather than short term emergency measures like an even-odd formula in some cities. 

London introduced congestion pricing in 2003 by imposing a fine of £5 for vehicles entering Central London areas - in the first three years, it reduced vehicle traffic by 16 per cent and journey times by 14 per cent, with significant reduction in the levels of toxic gases and particulate matter. The fee was hiked to £10 five years later followed by restrictions on the entry of buses and trucks in Greater London areas which led to a reduction in the level of PM 2.5 by 20 per cent. Singapore follows a similar Electronic Road Pricing system based on high pricing using technology like GPS.

Delhi had 8.47 million registered vehicles as on 31 March 2015, out of which 5.72 million were two wheelers. Every year, 600,000 new vehicles are registered in Delhi, that is, more than 1600 vehicles per day. There is also an unknown number of vehicles registered in neighbouring states of Haryana or UP plying in Delhi. It is estimated that on any given day, there are about 4 million four wheelers are plying on Delhi roads - more than the total numbers of vehicles in Kolkata, Mumbai and Chennai put together. For all its good intentions, the AAP Govt’s move may add to this number by forcing commuters to buy additional vehicles. This cannot be a lasting solution to the city’s woes. Let us therefore think of a more viable alternative.

Telecommuting is a term coined by Jack Nilles in 1973 which is increasingly being used in the developed world, and is not unknown in some private sector organizations in our country too. It means remote work or telework, i.e. technology-assisted work - an arrangement that allows employees not to commute to a central place for work; they are ‘work-at-home’ employees. In addition, there are ‘nomad workers’ who use mobile telecommunications technology to work from cyber cafes or other locations. 

Government and companies are increasingly using these concepts to attract and retain workers. These are not only welfare measures, but also smart economics as well. The General Services Administration of USA estimates that if the federal employees telecommute at least one day every week, federal agencies could boost productivity by more than $ 2.3 billion annually.

Wikipedia reports the results of a Reuters poll, according to which approximately “one in five workers around the globe, particularly employees in the Middle East, Latin America and Asia, telecommute frequently and nearly 10 per cent work from home every day”. The guiding motto behind this is : “Work is something we DO, not a place that we GO”. According to Wikipedia, over fifty million U.S. workers - that is, about 40 per cent of the working population, could work from home at least part of the time.  The number of employees reported to have actually worked from their home on their primary job in 2010 was 9.4 million. In that year, U.S. Federal Government passed the Telework Enhancement Act ‘in order to improve Continuity of operations and ensure that essential Federal functions are maintained during emergency situations; to promote management effectiveness when telework is used to achieve reductions in organizational and transit costs and environmental impacts; and to enhance the work-life balance of workers’. 

The 2011 Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey indicates that in 13 government departments, more than half the employees reported teleworking, including 69 per cent from the Dept. of Education, 74 per cent from the Office of Personal Management and 76 per cent from the National Science Foundation. Forrester Research’s US Telecommuting Forecast reports that 34 million Americans work from home and ‘the number is expected to reach a staggering 63 million - or 43 per cent of the U.S. workforce - by 2016’. Cisco reports that the company has generated ‘an estimated annual savings of $277 million in productivity by allowing employees to telecommute and telework’. In the UK, in 2012, over 4 million employees out of a total workforce of 30 million were teleworkers. 

Let us look at the potential benefits of telecommuting should we introduce it in India. It would allow employees to better manage their work together with family obligations. It will lead to more freedom, more resilience, greater productivity, improved staff retention and lower operating costs. The most significant impact will of course be on our city environment. Think of Delhi, with a population of 18 million and a working population of about 6 million. Even if a third doesn’t have to report to the office everyday, that means 1 million vehicles less on the roads. Think about the impact of this on vehicular pollution.

Many government departments and ministries, public sector organsiations, think tanks, IT/ ITC industries, design and development orgnaisations, taxation departments etc. can seamlessly shift to such a work culture by appropriate planning and reengineering of their works. Only those employed with organisations whose business involves dealing with the public, like banks, academic institutions, trading and business, transportation and the like will have to commute daily, but they will commute faster since the roads will be decongested. Life for everyone will be simpler and more free, and the air purer to breathe. 

The writer is a commentator. The views expressed are personal.

FLOODS

HINDU, DEC 8, 2015



For a morally conscious government

SUHRITH PARTHASARATHY

Last week, Chennai experienced the wettest December day that the city has seen in more than 100 years. The rain’s effects were unprecedented and utterly devastating. Beginning Tuesday morning, thundershowers came furiously lashing down on the city, and by the time there was some respite from the rain, nearly 24 hours later, substantial parts of the city had been besieged by water. Hundreds of thousands of people had been left stranded with no electricity, no access to food and drinking water, and, most tragically, nowhere to go for refuge from the gushing floods but to their respective rooftops, if indeed they were fortunate enough to have one.



After the devastation

The following Wednesday, especially as day gave way to night, the scenes around, and on, Chennai’s roads appeared almost apocalyptic. Several areas of the city were left marooned and inaccessible, and, with various reservoirs overflowing, the water levels on the streets rose alarmingly even after the rainfall had abated. As Vaishna Roy wrote in The Hindu (“And still waters run deep”, Dec.3) — which, on Wednesday, and a rare occasion in its 137-year-old history, did not deliver a printed newspaper to the city — the worst of Chennai also appeared to bring along with it the best of Chennai, as an indomitable character appeared to animate all cross-sections of society. Social media was being used effectively to mobilise food, water, blankets, medicines and other essential resources for people who were isolated by the rain, and to also help direct rescue operators to areas where people were in greatest distress. Homes were opened up to provide dry spaces to those stranded, and several people came together to organise and pack food and water for distribution across the city. There were also heroes aplenty on the heavily submerged streets — fire and armed service personnel, police and corporation workers, and, not least, hundreds of civilians — who helped navigate people to safety.

The nature of the devastation is such that the aftermath of the flooding is likely to be felt for months, perhaps even for years. It has become a common refrain to claim, though, that this is no time for politicising the crisis. To do so when people’s homes have been wrecked, when many lives have been lost, and when roads have been left in a shambles, we are told, is tantamount to insensitivity. Now, it is unquestionable that several state functionaries have been working both selflessly and tirelessly to help bring the city back on its veritable feet, and our focus should indeed be on the immediate work required to allow Chennai, and its neighbouring villages and towns, to return to something resembling normalcy, if at all that’s possible. But, it’s even more important that, simultaneously, we ask the state — including the judiciary — and, for that matter, ourselves, vital questions on what has really caused this mammoth destruction.

Folly of assumed growth

So far, the State government’s response to any questions asked has been all too familiar. It believes that there is nothing that could have been done to avert this tragedy. “Losses are unavoidable when there’s very heavy rain,” the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, J. Jayalalithaa, had said during the rains in November that preceded the present crisis. “Swift rescue and relief alone are indicators of a good government.” If one were to view this statement as representing even a kernel of the truth, a complete absence of urban planning, an inability to ensure effective compliance with development rules, a lack of enforcement of fire safety mechanisms, and an abject failure to provide adequately safe shelter to the homeless are all apparently jobs beyond a reasonable government’s domain.

Needless to say, what we have experienced, and are continuing to experience, is incomparable. As a developing society, we have never seen rains like this before in Chennai. The city’s infrastructure, as is quite palpable, was not built to face a catastrophe of this kind. After all, how could we have possibly predicted the kind of rainfall that we have seen? But questions such as this ought not to represent axioms of justification. As citizens, a number of us have benefitted from Chennai’s rapid urbanisation. But as these devastating floods have shown, our callous effort at assumed growth has come at enormous costs.

It’s easy to view the present disaster as an act of god for which the government is simply not responsible. But any ecologist would tell us that the floods, as much as it might have been triggered by unprecedented rainfall, are substantially man-made. Over the years, in an effort to supposedly modernise Chennai, transport systems have been constructed over lands bounding, and, at times, on top of, canals and rivers; the so-called rules that regulate coastal regulation zones have been mercilessly broken; multi-storied buildings have been constructed on environmentally hazardous lands; and natural drainage systems have been blocked to enable a supposed development that is, at every level, simply unsustainable.



Condoning violations?

Various succeeding governments in Tamil Nadu have been consistently reprehensible in allowing Chennai to decay into this urban mess. What’s most unfortunate though is that even in judging our follies, we are eager to point not at these egregious violations of building rules and absurd constructions made over forbidden land, but to the purported encroachments made on riverbeds by the poor, who have nowhere else to go in search of livelihood. When the dust finally settles, it’s entirely likely that it is these settlements, which will be targeted in an effort to make Chennai supposedly more flood-resistant. As has now become the norm, the most grievous infractions will not only be condoned, but will also find active support from the state — what we’ll see is a hallmark of a neo-liberal economy, a quite unique brand of socialism, a socialism that is meant for the rich and the rich alone.

In the days to follow, therefore, it is vital that the inexplicable stroke of misfortune that the rainfall in Chennai has brought with it is not used as an excuse to whittle away the moral bankruptcy of successive governments in Tamil Nadu. India’s Constitution might implore upon governments to guarantee a welfare state. But as much as ruling regimes might like to tell us otherwise, what we have had, in Tamil Nadu, with both the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam at the helm over several years, isn’t as much governments focussed on welfarism as ones that dole out benefits with the sole view to securing votes.

Pinning down responsibility

Unfortunately, the courts, which are meant to act as a counter-majoritarian institution, have also been complicit in acting as an enforcer of the prevalent will of the state. There is a deep suspicion within the judiciary of any socio-economic movement aimed at challenging the status quo, of any programme that seeks to confront the supposed developmental agenda of the state. As a result, flagrant violations of development rules and regulations, both by the government and by private entities, are routinely overlooked.

The destruction caused by the recent floods ought not to be seen as a force majeure event. Instead, the loss of property must be viewed as an illegal expropriation by government. The state’s role cannot end with mere rescue and relief. The government must be forced to pay for the losses suffered by millions of people across Tamil Nadu. It’s time that we fought for greater accountability from those in positions of authority. We must strive not only towards restoring an element of normalcy to the places affected, but we must also actively work towards ensuring that any supposed development activity undertaken in the city is environmentally sustainable. To this end, rhetoric alone would not suffice. We require a form of dissent that is far stronger, one that demands a morally conscious government, and one that requires the state to ensure that environmental rights and interests are not trumped by neo-liberal corruption.

(Suhrith Parthasarathy is an advocate in the Madras High Court.)

What’s most unfortunate is that even in judging our follies, we are eager to point not at egregious violations of building rules and absurd constructions made over forbidden land, but to the purported encroachments made on riverbeds by the poor, who have nowhere else to go in search of livelihood.

The state’s role cannot end with mere rescue and relief. The government must be forced to pay for the losses suffered by millions of people across Tamil Nadu. It is time that we fought for greater accountability from those in positions of authority.



INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

STATESMAN, DEC 8, 2015



Heart of Asia

Salman Haidar
The next in the series of ‘Heart of Asia’ conferences of the ‘Istanbul Process’ is shortly to take place in Islamabad. These ministerial-level meetings have been going on since 2011, bringing together senior representatives of a number of countries of the region in discussions aimed at enhancing security around Afghanistan and promoting economic development in that country. Apart from the immediate neighbours, the process has drawn in major countries that hem the region, including China and Russia, Turkey where the Istanbul Process originated, Iran and the major Arab states, twenty-five participants in all. The Islamabad meeting will be the fifth in the series and India’s External Affairs Minister is among the prominent invitees. Her presence will be an important demonstration of India’s commitment to the restoration of Afghanistan’s tranquility and prosperity after a prolonged period of disorder.
The Istanbul Process is the latest of numerous international initiatives of the last few decades to restore peace and development in and around Afghanistan. That country has never been an easy place to deal with, for itself and for its close neighbours, having experienced much turbulence through the attentions of powerful, aggrandizing countries in its vicinity, and through its own restless stirrings that have driven it to spread its wings abroad. The constant unrest within and warlike attention from without led it to be described in the colonial discourse as ‘the Cockpit of Asia’, forever wrapped in strife and rivalry. The term that now seems to have gained favour -‘Heart of Asia’ -is certainly more appropriate and makes due acknowledgement of the geographical significance of its location at the centre of the continent. But however one describes it, Afghanistan has been, and remains, a strategic magnet that draws the attention and affects the affairs of its region.
In recent years, India has emerged as a major economic partner of Afghanistan and has substantially enlarged its traditional friendship and cooperation with that country. Lack of a shared border after 1947 affected what used to be a flourishing traditional trade between the two countries but in the last few years they have collaborated with Iran in finding alternative access through Chah Bahar on the Gulf, so the trading prospects are much improved. India is now in a position to play a fuller part in international efforts like the Istanbul Process without running up, as it has so often in the past, against the barrier of Pakistan.  It can also have easier access to Central Asia and thereby contribute to the development of the region as a whole, so it is poised for a bigger role in the Istanbul Process. Pakistan has always been leery of India becoming prominent in Afghan affairs, with the result that in the early stages New Delhi was not able to play a very active part in restoring the war-devastated Afghan economy commensurate with its traditional relationship with that country. But now its role has expanded and its contribution to the international effort has become steadily more significant. The Heart of Asia meetings and earlier similar efforts have thus done a good deal already to remove unnecessary barriers to enhanced cooperation.
There are other considerations, too, besides the economic factors, that play an important part in India’s approach. Even though the extremist and terrorist groups that earlier held sway in Afghanistan have been largely curbed, some such elements can still cause disruption and trouble, as was witnessed in recent terror attacks within Afghanistan. Such elements have access to Pakistan across the historically porous border where they add to the prevalent insecurity, and can become a menace further afield in India. Thus the security-related aspect of the ‘Heart of Asia’ meeting is of direct interest to India, which is always eager to widen the international net against terror. This is an important unifying theme for the participants, for many of them have been subjected to terror attacks and would be ready to back better regional coordination in confronting the menace. India will no doubt have a leading role in this endeavour. 
This conference in Islamabad has drawn particular attention in New Delhi because it comes at a time when Indo-Pak relations are, as so often, in a state of flux. After a fairly prolonged downturn following the cancellation of a proposed meeting between senior officials, the atmosphere has been abruptly improved by a brief meeting between Prime Ministers Modi and Nawaz Sharif at the Paris conference on climate change. They exchanged a few words and a warm handshake, which have given fresh momentum and raised expectations of revival of the stalled dialogue.  As has been seen often in the past, the leaders keep coming back to it, and no turning away from dialogue seems final, though both clearly have to be careful of their own hardline supporters. For further complication, two Pakistani nationals with connections to the Pak High Commission have been apprehended on charges of espionage, which is grist to the mills of those who advocate further suspension of dialogue. Nevertheless, the Minister’s visit to Islamabad will be an important opportunity to revive and restore bilateral dialogue, which cannot lightly be set aside, and though the formal purpose of Ms. Swaraj’s Islamabad visit is to attend the ‘Heart of Asia’ meeting, Indian interest in her visit is likely to be focused less on the conference than on the bilateral meeting between her and her Pakistani counterparts.
As an aspect of India’s enhanced diplomatic activity in the region as a whole, it is noteworthy that the External Affairs Minister  has been invited to visit Syria where efforts are intensifying to find a solution to the long-running and dangerous civil strife. Hitherto, Indian diplomacy has not been greatly active in that part of West Asia, so if Ms. Swaraj does accept the invitation from her Syrian counterpart, that will be something of a fresh departure. It will also underline the fact that this is a region where India’s broader interests are inescapably engaged and the country cannot hold aloof from developments taking place there.
The impending ‘Istanbul Process’ meeting in Islamabad therefore raises a number of possibilities for India. It provides an unexpected opportunity for putting the derailed Indo-Pak dialogue back on track; the conference has its own dynamic but what happens on the sidelines may well resonate louder than any other part of the deliberations so far as these two countries are concerned. At the same time, the conference provides an important forum for participants to agree on practical measures on their shared regional interests, especially the matter of terrorism. Region-wide cooperation on this is long identified as one of the key themes of the Istanbul Process, and should receive a considerable boost from the forthcoming meeting.

The writer is India's former Foreign Secretary.



PARLIAMENT

ECONOMIC TIMES, DEC 9, 2015



PM Narendra Modi initiates 1-hour tutorials for MPs on GST
NEW DELHI: The government is looking at scheduling a four-hour discussion in Parliament on Monday on the Goods and Services Tax bill, billed as the biggest ever tax reform legislation. Ahead of the discussion, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has initiated hour-long tutorial running through all five days of this week to address the concern of the MPs and explain to them the intricacies of the bill. 

The tutorial for members of both Houses has been arranged with the help of Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan to "educate" them on the importance of GST and how it will contribute to India's economy. 

The government has brought in tax experts that include former chairman of Central Board of Excise and Customs S D Majumder, Prof Kavita Rao of National Institute of Public Finance and Policy and two commissioner-level officers of CBEC to explain to the MPs what the bill is all about. 

The government needs support from a two-third majority in both Houses for the passage of the Constitution amendment bill, which will also require ratification by at least half of the states. However, the bill is yet to be introduced in Rajya Sabha with the Congress taking a belligerent stand over court summons issued to party president Sonia Gandhi in the National Herald case. 

Earlier, the NDA government had accepted a major demand of Congress on keeping the rates below 18 per cent. The government is still hopeful of getting the bill tabled and finding support from all major parties. But it can hardly afford isolating Congress on this important piece of legislation. 

In a conciliatory tone, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Tuesday said, "It's extremely important and all parties must come together. Now that revenue neutral rate of 15 per cent has been announced which was not even discussed...people were discussing 22-24 per cent." The FM, however, cautioned that any attempt to create any hurdle would amount to damaging the interests of the country. 

The FM said Congress must help in passage of the bill as it was originally an initiative started by the UPA party. 

The PM had earlier held a meeting with Congress President Sonia Gandhi and his predecessor Manmohan Singh to break the ice on GST and discuss the opposition party's suggested changes in the bill. 

POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT

ECONOMIC TIMES, DEC 11, 2015




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