- These bank mergers, and the ones already carried out, will lead to the creation of big banks with an enhanced capacity to give credit.
- These big banks would also be able to compete globally.
- Merged banks will increase their operational efficiency by reducing their cost of lending.
- The banks that are being merged with each other run the same or very similar platforms, and so there will be no disruption in their activities.
- The merger also has the potential to lead to large cost reductions due to network overlaps.
Showing posts with label Thane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thane. Show all posts
Saturday, August 31
5 Reasons why PSBs have been merged
Tuesday, August 7
36 #Recall Pingale – Story of an IAS officer
36 #Recall Pingale –
Story of an IAS officer
07.08.18 The
Hindu Article
Vijay Maruti
Pingale, a 2004 batch officer of the Tamil Nadu cadre, joined the civil
services because he wanted to reform governance from within the system. But
after 14 years of trying, the civil servant, who holds an MBBS degree, has
decided to throw in the towel. He submitted his resignation some days ago and
hopes to pursue his goal of governance reform by joining an NGO. The State
government, however, is yet to accept his resignation.
Dr. Pingale
first came under the spotlight in 2013 when, as Deputy Commissioner (Works),
Chennai Corporation, he introduced advanced technology to fix responsibility
for shoddy work on civic infrastructure projects such as roads, bridges,
streetlights, and pedestrian facilities.
It was during
his tenure that for the first time contractors who re-laid roads without
adhering to norms began to be regularly penalised, winning him much support
among the public. He involved IT companies in develop a digital dashboard for
monitoring all civic projects on a real-time basis at the field level.
A special team
of engineers that he had formed to track the quality of the roads had found
that more than 30% of the roads re-laid in Chennai lasted less than a year.
Dr.Pingale had
also unearthed a scam in the maintenance of public toilets in Chennai and
initiated action against those who had illegally collected money from
residents. Surprisingly, or perhaps expectedly, after just 16 months in the
Greater Chennai Corporation, Dr. Pingale was shifted to the Industries
Department. According to sources, this was done under pressure from the
contractors whom he had penalised.
As Joint
Secretary, Industries Department, Dr. Pingale organised the Global Investors
Meet in Chennai. With his resignation as yet unaccepted, he remains with the
department, under the Union Ministry of Commerce in Delhi. According to sources
close to him, Dr. Pingale, is all set to join a NGO involved in an issue close
to his heart – the use of technology to improve governance.
“With his
departure, Tamil Nadu would lose a very good IAS officer,” said R.A. Israel
Jebasingh, his batchmate.
Xxx
2015 HT Article
The story of an honest IAS officer, who was transferred just three days
after he named contractors who botched up road work in Chennai, has gone viral
at a time devastating floods have exposed flaws in urban management.
Now netizens are rallying behind him and have started an online petition
to reinstate him as the Joint Commissioner (Works) of Chennai Corporation.
“A few days ago, Mr.Vijay Pingale, Joint Commisioner (Works) of Chennai
Corporation got transferred on the grounds that are completely unacceptable. He
is an honest, diligent and competent officer. Chennai City needs efficient
officer like Mr Pingale to get all the incomplete works like relaying roads and
other civil work carried out by Chennai Corporation. He should be recalled and
reinstated immediately. At least he should be given time to finish off all the
work that he had started. Please support this petition in favour of
Mr.Pingale,” a petition supporting him on change.org reads.
An MBBS graduate and IAS officer of the 2004 batch , Vijay Pingale, who
was the joint commissioner (works) of Chennai Corporation, dared to take on the
road contractor’s cartel, following which he was transferred to the industrial
department.
Pingale not only made the mistake of naming and shaming contractors for
their shoddy work, but he also imposed fines on corrupt contractors. According
to a report in Times of India, Pingale made public on November 11 the names of
nine contractors who were asked to return Rs 2 crore to the civic body after
the corporation had to carry out repair work on stretches laid by them.
Pingale further promised to name other contractors for poor work and
said the total penalties were likely to rise. The move reportedly infuriated
the contractors and he was transferred just 3 days after the incident.
Officials on conditions of anonymity told the Times of India that the
contractor lobby was responsible for the decision to move Pingale out of the
corporation as his insistence on accountability and refusal to buckle to
political pressure irked several contractors.
As head of the works department, Pingale was second only to corporation
commissioner Vikram Kapur and handled major duties in the civic body including
roads, buildings, bridges, solid waste management, storm water drains,
electrical, mechanical engineering, planning and investigation.
The online petition supporting Pingale also called for a social change
by citizens by raising their voice against transfer of honest officers.
“Vijay was arbitrarily transferred .. Why ? Because he levied fines
against Contractor Mafia who are responsible for the poor quality of roads..Is
this the price for fighting to make the city better... Don’t let your voice go
unnoticed.. Fight the injustice..,” the petition said.
Support for him also poured out on Twitter amd Facebook with netizens
using the hashtag
#RecallPingale to express their anger and resentment against
the sudden transfer.
Labels:
Civil Servant Resigns,
Corruption,
IAS Coaching,
Mumbai,
Politcial Interference,
sher ias academy,
Tamil Nadu Officer,
Thane,
UPSC Coaching,
Vijay Maruti Pingale
Location:
Thane, Maharashtra, India
Monday, August 6
34. ARTICLE 35A – CONTROVERSIAL ORIGIN
What is it?
Article 35A is a provision incorporated in the Constitution giving
the Jammu and Kashmir Legislature a carte blanche to decide who all are
‘permanent residents’ of the State and confer on them special rights and
privileges in public sector jobs, acquisition of property in the State,
scholarships and other public aid and welfare. The provision mandates that no
act of the legislature coming under it can be challenged for violating the
Constitution or any other law of the land.
How did it come about?
Article 35A was incorporated into the
Constitution in 1954 by an order of the then President Rajendra Prasad on the
advice of the Jawaharlal Nehru Cabinet. The controversial Constitution
(Application to Jammu and Kashmir) Order of 1954 followed the 1952 Delhi
Agreement entered into between Nehru and the then Prime Minister of Jammu and
Kashmir Sheikh Abdullah, which extended Indian citizenship to the ‘State
subjects’ of Jammu and Kashmir.
The Presidential Order was issued under Article
370 (1) (d) of the Constitution. This provision allows the President to make
certain “exceptions and modifications” to the Constitution for the benefit of
‘State subjects’ of Jammu and Kashmir.
So Article 35A was added to the Constitution as
a testimony of the special consideration the Indian government accorded to the
‘permanent residents’ of Jammu and Kashmir.
According to the Jammu-Kashmir constitution, a
Permanent Resident is defined as a person who was a state subject on May 14,
1954, or who has been residing in the state for a period of 10 years, and has
“lawfully acquired immovable property in the state”.
Only the Jammu-Kashmir assembly can change the
definition of PR through a law ratified by a two-thirds majority.
Why does it matter?
The parliamentary route of lawmaking was
bypassed when the President incorporated Article 35A into the Constitution.
Article 368 (i) of the Constitution empowers only Parliament to amend the
Constitution. So did the President act outside his jurisdiction? Is Article 35A
void because the Nehru government did not place it before Parliament for
discussion? A five-judge Bench of the Supreme Court in its March 1961 judgment
in Puranlal Lakhanpal vs. The President of India discusses the President’s powers
under Article 370 to ‘modify’ the Constitution. Though the court observes that
the President may modify an existing provision in the Constitution under
Article 370, the judgment is silent as to whether the President can, without
the Parliament’s knowledge, introduce a new Article. This question remains
open.
A writ petition filed by NGO We the Citizens
challenges the validity of both Article 35A and Article 370. It argues that
four representatives from Kashmir were part of the Constituent Assembly involved
in the drafting of the Constitution and the State of Jammu and Kashmir was
never accorded any special status in the Constitution. Article 370 was only a
‘temporary provision’ to help bring normality in Jammu and Kashmir and
strengthen democracy in that State, it contends. The Constitution-makers did
not intend Article 370 to be a tool to bring permanent amendments, like Article
35A, in the Constitution.
The petition said Article 35 A is against the
“very spirit of oneness of India” as it creates a “class within a class of
Indian citizens”. Restricting citizens from other States from getting
employment or buying property within Jammu and Kashmir is a violation of
fundamental rights under Articles 14, 19 and 21 of the Constitution.
A second petition filed by Jammu and Kashmir
native Charu Wali Khanna has challenged Article 35A for protecting certain
provisions of the Jammu and Kashmir Constitution, which restrict the basic
right to property if a native woman marries a man not holding a permanent
resident certificate. “Her children are denied a permanent resident
certificate, thereby considering them illegitimate,” the petition said.
Why does it matter?
Attorney-General K.K. Venugopal has called for
a debate in the Supreme Court on the sensitive subject.
Recently, a Supreme Court Bench, led by Justice
Dipak Misra, tagged the Khanna petition with the We the Citizens case, which
has been referred to a three-judge Bench. The court has indicated that the
validity of Articles 35A and 370 may ultimately be decided by a Constitution
Bench.
Counter View
The view from the Right is that by striking
down Article 35A, it would allow people from outside Jammu-Kashmir to settle in
the state and acquire land and property, and the right to vote, thus altering
the demography of the Muslim-majority state.
The state’s two main political parties, PDP and
NC, contend that there would be no J&K left if this provision is tampered
with, and have vowed to fight the battle together.
Former Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti had warned
that if Article 35A is removed, there won’t be anyone left to carry the
Tricolour in Kashmir; Omar Abdullah has called it the death knell for pro-India
politics in the Valley.
ISSUES BEING DEBATED
Article 35A, first, the Constitutionality of insertion of Article 35A,
and second the conception of equality among the Indian citizen.
Labels:
Article 35A,
Article 35A(1)(d),
Article 370,
Best Notes,
BEST VIDEO,
General Studies,
GS,
IAS Coaching,
Jammu & Kashmir,
Mains Answer Writing,
Mumbai,
sher ias academy,
Thane,
UPSC Coaching,
UPSC Revision
Location:
Thane, Maharashtra, India
33. Article 370 & Procedure for Amendment of Constituion
SPECIAL
PROVISIONS
The Indian
Constitution protects certain sections of the society which have faced
injustice historically. In the similar vein, the Indian Constitution protects
certain States to immune from the Constitution under Part XXI titled
―Temporary, Transitional and Special Provisions‖ from Articles 369 to 392. In
this Part, the Indian Constitution provides temporary provisos to the State of
Jammu & Kashmir (Art 370). The Indian Constitution also provides special
provisions to State of Maharashtra and Gujarat (Art.371), Nagaland (Art.
371A)Nagaland (Art. 371A), Assam (Art. 371B), Manipur (Art. 371C), Andhra
Pradesh (Art. 371D), Sikkim (Art. 371F), Mizoram (Art. 371G), Arunachal Pradesh
(Art. 371H), Goa (Art. 371-I) and Karnataka (Art. 371 J). The object behind to
provide ―special‖ and ―temporary‖ provision to the certain States was to
protect these State‘s autonomy in some areas.
LIMITS ON
POWERS OF PRESIDENT
The issue of
consideration is, besides giving assent to the Bill passed by the Both Houses
(Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha), President of India has sole legislative power
under article 123 to make ordinance when either house of the Parliament is not
in session. These legislative powers of the President have only six-month
effect; in other words, it is the authority to make laws without discussion in
the Parliament in urgency for a shorter period. It is an exception in the
making law not a general rule or a permanent measure. In the Constitutional
scheme, the President of India has no legislative power to amends the
Constitution by bypass the democratic process. President‘s legislative,
executive and judicial power is subjective to aid and advice by the Council of
Minister (Art 74), but all these powers do not allow to the President to go
beyond the spirit of the Constitution.
POWERS OF
PRESIDENT VIA ARTICLE 370
370.
Temporary provisions with respect to the State of Jammu and Kashmir
Unparalleled
Special Status to Jammu & Kashmir
Power of
Parliament to make laws for the state is limited to – external affairs,
defence, communications and ancilliary matters.
Such
other matters in the said Lists (Union and Concurrent) as, with the concurrence
of the Government of the State, the President may by order specify.
1 (d) such of
the other provisions of this Constitution shall apply in relation to that State
subject to such exceptions and modifications as the President may by order
specify
Nowhere in the
Article 370 mentions that President of India has the power to amend the
Constitution or insert a new Article in the Constitution? The Article 370 only
states that the President can make any exceptions and modifications with the
concurrence of the Government of the State. Subclause 1 (d) of the Article 370
states that: ―Such power of the other provisions of this Constitution shall
apply in relation to that State subject to such exceptions and modifications as
the President may by order specify.‖
POWERS TO
AMEND THE CONSTITUTION
Article 368 is
the only way to amend the Constitution, not the President. The marginal note of
Article 368 States ―Power of the Parliament to amend the Constitution and
procedure, therefore‖ which means it is the Parliament that has the power to
amend the Constitution.
Labels:
Article 35A,
Article 370,
Best Notes,
BEST VIDEO,
General Studies,
GS,
IAS Coaching,
Jammu and Kashmir,
Mains Answer Writing,
Mumbai,
sher ias academy,
Special Provisions,
Thane,
UPSC Coaching,
UPSC Revision
Location:
Thane, Maharashtra, India
Sunday, August 5
32. BRICS – PAST, PRESENT & FUTURE
32.
BRICS – PAST, PRESENT & FUTURE
What is BRICS?
Why do these countries hold summits? Do they have enough in common to make a
difference in the global economics and politics? What have they achieved?
What are the
BRICS?
In 2001, Jim
O’Neill, then Chief Economist of Goldman Sachs, coined the acronym for Brazil,
Russia, India and China as the largest emerging markets economies. He expected
them to grow faster than the developed countries and to play an increasingly
important role in the world.
And so they have.
In the last 15 years, Brazil, Russia, and India have caught up with the
smallest G7 economy (Italy) in terms of nominal GDP, while China has overtaken
Japan and became the second largest economy in the world. Together, BRIC’s
nominal GDP is similar to that of the EU or US and is likely to overtake both
in the coming few years.
In 2009, BRIC
countries held their first summit. In 2010, South Africa asked to join and was
invited – thus transforming BRICs into BRICS.
Why does the
world need the BRICS?
Jim O’Neill’s
point has been that the world is changing. The leading role of the Group of
Seven (G7) and, more broadly, of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD) is no longer undisputed. Most multi-lateral institutions
were designed in the era when the West dominated the world. The US and Europe
are over-represented in the IMF and the World Bank. Together with Japan, they
control most regional development banks as well.
This imbalance
has been especially clear during the recent global financial crisis when the
need for participation by non-G7 countries became evident. This resulted in
reviving the Group of 20 (G20) and proposals to redistribute voting rights in
international financial institutions. But change has been slow and Western countries
continue to control the international financial institutions.
This is why
BRICS summits are so important. These meetings provide a unique forum where
non-OECD leaders can discuss global challenges and co-ordinate their actions
within and outside global institutions. The small size of the club and the
absence of OECD partners helps in shaping the discussions at the summit.
What have the
BRICS nations achieved?
Even though
BRICS are now playing a far more important role in the global economy, they have
not yet managed to get their act together. Even on key issues like selecting a
successor to Dominique Strauss-Kahn at the IMF, BRICS countries were not able
to put forward a credible alternative to the conventional approach that IMF
should be run by a Western European. Nor have they been able to speak with one
voice about the most important global economic and financial challenges –
co-ordination of monetary and fiscal policies, macroprudential regulation,
development aid etc.
Do they have
enough in common to get things done?
BRICS countries
are very different — both in terms of their resources and in terms of their
values and goals. The only thing they all have in common is, well, membership
of BRICS. Brazil and India are democratic, China and Russia are not. Brazil and
Russia export hydrocarbons, China and India are net importers. China and Russia
are permanent members of the UN Security Council – the others are not.
Structure of financial systems, levels of income, education, inequality, health
challenges also differ substantially within BRICS. This is why it is very hard
to speak with a unified voice and to co-ordinate action. The fact that BRICS
have not really established anything tangible yet should not be a
disappointment.
What could they
do?
This problem of
inaction will soon be overcome. BRICS now have a clear leader than can address
the issue of internal differences in goals and resources. BRICS is quickly
becoming a China-led club. Unlike 15 years ago, China’s nominal GDP is now
larger than that of the other club members combined. The same its true with net
international financial position, outward Foreign Direct Investment and
development aid.
China’s
leadership has finally turned the long-debated plan for a “BRICS Bank” into a reality. The BRICS have
founded the New Development Bank (NDB), which will become a major regional
development bank – the first one without OECD-countries’ membership (unless of
course Greece joins.)
The
establishment of NDB (head-quartered in Shanghai) suggests international
financial institutions should have been more flexible in adjusting their
governance to accommodate the increased role of BRICS in the world. NDB is not
likely – at least initially – to outperform existing development banks in terms
of skills and project quality. However, it will be the first tangible
multi-lateral project fully owned by the non-OECD countries – in a sense
confirming that Jim O’Neill’s vision was correct.
However, the
very fact that the only tangible BRICS project is NDB is also telling. NDB is
taking off exactly because it fits into China’s grander New Silk Road or “One
Belt, One Road” vision. NDB is in this sense proof that the BRICS club – like
Shanghai Cooperation Organization – is now led by China. In summits, BRICS’
leaders will talk as equals but whenever BRICS is up to something real, it will
be following China’s strategy.
XXX
The New
Development Bank (NDB), formerly referred to as the BRICS
Development Bank, is a multilateral development bank operated
by the BRICS states. The bank's primary focus of lending will be
infrastructure projects.
The BRICS
Contingent Reserve Arrangement (CRA) is a framework for providing protection
against global liquidity pressures. This includes currency issues where
members' national currencies are being adversely affected by global financial
pressures.
At the 2015 BRICS
summit in Russia, ministers from BRICS nations, initiated consultations for a
payment system that would be an alternative to the SWIFT system.
XXX
With an eye on a
divided leadership in the West — as was evident in the recent G-7 summit — the
BRICS leaders have committed with unprecedented emphasis to the principles of
“democracy” and “multilateralism” in the Johannesburg declaration. Democracy is
mentioned half-a-dozen times in the declaration, which, Indian government
interlocutors feel, is noteworthy, since at least two member-countries in the
grouping are socialist and non-democratic countries. In the Xiamen declaration,
democracy was mentioned thrice, mostly in the context of a democratic global
order.
Multilateralism
was mentioned 23 times in the Johannesburg declaration, as against seven times
in the Xiamen declaration last year. This assumes significance in the wake of
the US, under President Donald Trump, acting unilaterally on several occasions
— from the Israel-Palestine issue to Iran, and withdrawing from multilateral
pacts like JCPOA and TPP. It has also withdrawn from UNESCO and
UN Human Rights
Council.
Indian
interlocutors said that the seeping of democratic order, and the consequent
democratisation of the BRICS order, has been an Indian imprint on the
Johannesburg declaration, which is different from previous BRICS declarations.
The emphasis on inclusivity has also increased in the Johannesburg declaration,
as “inclusive” was mentioned 19 times, as compared to 9 times in the Xiamen declaration.
“These are the
most important takeaways from the Indian point of view, that we have been able
to put democracy and inclusiveness in the lexicon in a more pronounced manner,”
one of the Indian interlocutors told The Indian Express. Sources said that the
Chinese lexicon of a prosperous, shared future and win-win cooperation from
previous SCO summits has now given way to a more Indian and South African lingo
— of a representative world order approach.
The BRICS
leadership has also given a message of solidarity and geopolitical maturity,
officials privy to the negotiations told The Indian Express, as against the
rancour and divisive tone in the G-7 summit.
Sources said
that Prime Minister Narendra Modi discussed the above issues with Chinese
President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Xi said that as
major emerging market economies, as well as vindicators and contributors of the
current international order, China and India should strengthen bilateral
cooperation while exploring a new model for regional cooperation, upholding
multilateralism, championing economic globalisation and striving for a more
just and rational international order, Xinhua reported.
Labels:
Best Notes,
BEST VIDEO,
BRICS Summit,
General Studies,
GS,
IAS Coaching,
Johannesburg,
Mains Answer Writing,
Mumbai,
New Development Bank,
sher ias academy,
Thane,
UPSC Coaching,
UPSC Revision,
Xiamen
Location:
Thane, Maharashtra, India
Saturday, August 4
31 SIMULTANEOUS ELECTIONS IN INDIA - PROS & CONS
31
SIMULTANEOUS ELECTIONS
A.) Introduction: Meaning of
Simultaneous Election
Simultaneous elections should
imply that elections to all the three
tiers of constitutional institutions (Lok Sabha, State Legislative Assembly
and Local Bodies) take place in a synchronized
and co-ordinated fashion. What this effectively means is that a voter casts his vote for electing
members for all tiers of the Government on a single day.
B.) Reason for Supporting Simultaneous
Election
The key adverse impacts that the
existing electoral cycle leads to could be broadly categorized into the
following:
1. Impact on development programs and
governance due to imposition of Model Code of Conduct by the Election
Commission
2. Frequent
elections lead to massive
expenditures by Government and other stakeholders
3. Engagement of security forces
for significantly prolonged periods
4. Other
Issues
a.
Frequent
elections disrupt normal public life: Holding of political rallies
disrupts road traffic and also leads to noise pollution.
b.
Frequent elections perpetuate caste, religion and communal issues
across the country.
c.
Frequent elections adversely impact the focus of governance and policy making:
Need to win the next impending election makes short-term political imperatives
an immediate priority. As a result, sound long-term economic planning often
takes a back seat.
C.) How it will violate basic
principles of Constitution
Principle
of Accountability:
1.
The legislature shall be accountable to elected
representatives. Supporters of the measure often point to simultaneous
elections until 1967. But it is often forgotten that those simultaneous
elections were not constitutionally mandated; they occurred simultaneously only
because historically, electoral competition with adult suffrage formally took
off at the same time at the national and state level and for the first two
decades, electoral mandates for national and state legislatures ordinarily
remained stable (barring in Kerala). In other words, simultaneous elections
were not a principle but a function of historical coincidence and initial
political stability.
2.
The implication
of simultaneous election would be that a government cannot be removed, however
anti-people or under-performing it may be, or in spite of being hopelessly in a
minority, if the Opposition is not united enough on an alternative to
replace the existing ministry.
Role
of President:
NITI Aayog mentions, if the mechanism of
confidence vote fails and the Lok Sabha is to be prematurely dissolved, then,
instead of fresh elections, if the period is short, the president can carry on the administration with advice from a council of
ministers (which obviously does not have the support of the legislature).
This would be the most blatant violation of the principle of responsible government and such a proposal is
nothing short of rewriting the Constitution via a back door and bringing in of
the provision of “president’s rule”
at the national level. It would also accord to the president an unreasonably
wide discretion of appointing such an interim, non-responsible government.
Constitutional
Protection of 5 Year Tenure of an elected Legislature:
Three, if the legislature is to be inevitably
dissolved with a larger portion of the five-year term still remaining, then it
is suggested that fresh elections are held but the legislature shall not have
the full five-year term; instead, it would have a truncated term that remained from the previous legislature’s term.
This would jeopardise the constitutional protection that a legislature, once
elected, gets a five-year term.
D.) Way Forward
Are there no other solutions avoid
the key adverse impacts that the existing electoral cycle?
1.
If expenditure is an issue, that logic would
finally take us to the argument that elections
are expensive and hence problematic.
2.
If the interference of the model code of conduct is an issue, political parties need to impose
self-regulation when in power and
ensure that the boundaries between rightful
and legitimate decision-making and wrongful advantage of positions of power
to win votes are strictly and legally defined.
3.
If black (illegal) money is the problem, then it
can hardly be addressed by this measure; changing both laws and practices involving electoral finance
will be the best route to adopt. (660 Words)
XXX
Idea of One
Nation, One Election has been repeated from various public platforms on a
number of occasions. Four reasons are usually cited: massive expenditure; diversion of security and civil staff from primary
duties; impact on governance due to the model code of conduct, and disruption
to normal public life.
B.) Argument
against it
Cost Factor: Elections cost 0.05% of India’s total
expenditure: The
Election Commission incurs a total cost of roughly Rs. 8,000 crore to conduct all State and federal elections in a span of
five years, or roughly Rs. 1,500 crore
every year. Nearly 600 million Indians vote in India’s elections, which
means, it costs Rs. 27 per voter per
year to keep India an electoral democracy. Is this a “massive” expense? To
put this in context, all the States and the Centre combined incurred an expenditure of nearly Rs. 30 lakh crore
in FY2014. Surely, 0.05% of India’s
total annual expenditure is not a large price to pay for the pride of being
the world’s largest and most vibrant electoral democracy. The notion that
elections are prohibitively expensive is false and misleading.
Code of Conduct:
The model code of conduct for elections was agreed to by political parties in 1979, and prohibits the ruling
party from incurring capital expenditure
for certain projects after elections are announced. If India is indeed
embarking on a path of “cooperative federalism” as the Prime Minister also
claims, then more such projects will be
undertaken by each State and not by the Centre. So, why should elections in
one State hinder governance in the rest of the States? And if all political
parties still feel the need to reform
the code, they are free to do so. The solution is to reform the code and
not the electoral cycle.
Diversion of civil staff and disruption of public
life were the two other reasons cited, but
these sound more like reasons against holding elections in general. Surely, a disruption to public life twice in five
years is not a binding constraint in the larger interests of interim accountability.
Voter Behaviour:
There is clear empirical evidence that most
Indian voters tend to choose the same party when elections are held simultaneously
to both Centre and State, with the relationship diminishing as elections are
held farther away.
Federal Political Autonomy: Further, simultaneous elections impinge on the political autonomy
of States. Today, any elected State
government can choose to dissolve its Assembly and call for fresh elections.
If elections are to be held simultaneously, States will have to give up this
power and wait for a national election schedule. There can be legitimate
reasons for State governments to dissolve their Assemblies and call for fresh
elections, as should be the case in Tamil Nadu. Under a simultaneous elections regime, the State will be beholden to
the Union government for elections to its State, which goes against the
very grain of political autonomy under our federal structure.
Labels:
Best Notes,
BEST VIDEO,
Electoral Reforms,
General Studies,
GS,
IAS Coaching,
Mains Answer Writing,
Mumbai,
Pros & Cons,
sher ias academy,
Simultaneous Election,
Thane,
UPSC Coaching,
UPSC Revision
Location:
Thane, Maharashtra, India
Thursday, August 2
CITIZENSHIP LAWS – INDIA AND ASSAM
30 CITIZENSHIP
LAWS – INDIA AND ASSAM
SIGNIFICANCE OF CITIZENSHIP
Citizenship
defines the relationship of an individual with a political community, and
signifies the individual’s full and
equal membership of that community. A citizen is defined in opposition
to an ‘alien’; the exclusion of aliens is central to the concept of modern
citizenship. The Constitution gives some fundamental rights to non-citizens —
the right to equality before the law
(Article 14); protection of life
and personal liberty (Article 21); freedom to manage religious affairs (Article 25),
for example. However, some other fundamental rights, such as prohibition of
discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth
(Article 15); equality of opportunity in matters of public employment (Article
16); and the six basic freedoms of speech and expression, peaceful assembly,
forming associations or unions, movement, residence, and profession (subject to
reasonable restrictions, Article 19), are available only to citizens. Also,
only a citizen has the right to vote
in elections to Lok Sabha and state Assemblies (Article 326), become a member of these Houses
(Articles 84, 191d), and assume certain high offices such as those of
President, Vice-President, Governor, and a judge of the higher judiciary.
PRINCIPLES OF
CITIZENSHIP
Under the
principle of jus soli (right of the soil), citizenship belongs to everyone born
in the territory of a state. Jus sanguinis (right of blood), on the other hand,
gives prominence to ties of blood in the grant of citizenship.
CITIZENSHIP
ARTICLES AND LAWS
Articles 5-11 of
the Constitution describe the various categories of persons who are entitled to
citizenship. These were enforced on November 26, 1949, ahead of the
commencement of the Constitution on January 26, 1950. Article 11 empowers
Parliament to regulate citizenship by law; the Citizenship Act was, therefore,
passed in 1955. It has since been amended 1986, 2003, 2005, and 2015.
Article 5
provided for citizenship on the commencement of the Constitution: all those domiciled and born in India, either of
whose parents was born in India, or anyone who had been ordinarily resident in India for at
least five years preceding the commencement of the Constitution. Under
Article 6, anyone who migrated to
India before July 19, 1948, from territory that had become part Pakistan,
automatically became a citizen if either of their parents or grandparents was
born in India. But those who entered India after this date needed to
register themselves. Those who had migrated
to Pakistan after March 1, 1947, but had subsequently returned on resettlement
permits, too, were included within the citizenship net (Article7).
Under Article 8, a person of Indian
origin residing outside India who, or any of whose parents or grandparents, was
born in India can register as an Indian citizen with the relevant Indian
diplomatic mission.
How did the situation in Assam impact the nature of citizenship?
To protect the social and cultural interests of the Assamese people,
Parliament enacted The Immigrants (Expulsion from Assam) Act in 1950, under
which the central government could
order the removal of any person who had come into Assam from outside
India, and whose “stay… in Assam is detrimental
to the interests of the general public of India or of any section thereof or of
any Scheduled Tribe in Assam”. However, the aftermath of the Partition
of India, including the failure of the two-nation theory that was manifested in
the birth of Bangladesh, and the nature of the topography and porous border in
the east, saw continued largescale infiltration into Assam — which triggered an
agitation in the state that ultimately led to the signing of the Assam Accord
of August 15, 1985. The 1986 amendment to the Citizenship Act, 1955, inserted
Section 6A under which all persons of Indian origin who had entered Assam
before January 1, 1966 and been its ordinary residents were deemed to be Indian
citizens; those who came after January 1, 1966, but before March 25, 1971, were
to get citizenship upon registration at the expiry of 10 years after their
detection as foreigner; and those who entered after March 25, 1971, upon
identification under the Illegal Migrant
(Determination by Tribunal) (IMDT) Act, 1983, were to be deported.
It was in 1966 that the
atrocities in East Pakistan started, explains Hajela, triggering the exodus. On
March 25, 1971, the Pakistan Army began operations in Dhaka, marking the start
of the Bangladesh war. Presumably, people on the other side of the border would
have no reason to flee once the liberation war actually started.
The 1986 amendment made the Citizenship Act less inclusive, by adding to
the principle of jus soli the condition that in addition to one’s birth in India (for those born on or after July
1, 1987), at least one parent must be be an Indian citizen at the time of birth.
The 2003 took it closer towards jus sanguinis and away from jus soli —
for those born after the commencement of the Act, not only was at least one parent
required to be an Indian citizen, the other could not be an illegal migrant. In
2004, Parliament was told that as of
2001, there were 1.2 crore illegal immigrants in India, of whom 50 lakh were in
Assam.
What are some of the cases linked to citizenship in Assam that have gone
to the Supreme Court?
In 2005, a three-judge Bench led by Chief Justice of India R C Lahoti
struck down the IMDT Act. It expressed concern over demographic change in
Assam, and made references to “international Islamic fundamentalism”
(Sarbananda Sonowal vs Union Of India & Anr, July 12, 2005; Sonowal, now
Chief Minister of Assam, was then an Asom Gana Parishad MP). In 2007, the court
quashed the Foreigners (Tribunals for Assam) Order, 2006, which put the onus of
proving a person a foreigner on the complainant (Sonowal II, December 5, 2006).
In Assam Sanmilita Mahasangha & Ors vs Union Of India & Ors, December
17, 2014, where the constitutionality of the 1986 amendment was challenged, the
court referred the matter to a Constitution Bench.
What is the new proposed amendment to the Citizenship Act?
The Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2016, seeks to amend the 1955 Act to
permit members of six communities — Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi and
Christian — from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan eligible for citizenship
if they had entered the country before December 14, 2014. Under the original
Act, an applicant seeking citizenship by naturalisation must have resided in
India during the last 12 months, and for 11 of the previous 14 years. The
proposed Bill relaxes the 11-year requirement to six years for applicants
belonging to these six religious communities and three countries.
Many organisations in Assam are up in arms against the proposed Bill,
which they fear may trigger demographic change in Assam as illegal Bangladeshi
Hindu migrants are granted citizenship.
ASSAM NATIONAL REGISTER OF CITIZENS
29 ASSAM
NATIONAL REGISTER OF CITIZENS
On Monday, Assam released
the final draft of the National Register of Citizens (NRC),
seven months after it released the first draft on 1 January 2018, which
included 1.9 crore names out of a total applicant pool of 3.29 crore. Monday’s
list however, left our 40.07 lakh people wherein 2.89 crore people were found
eligible out of 3.29 crore applicants.
What is the NRC?
During the census of 1951, a national citizen register
was created that contained the details of every person by village. The data
included name, age, father’s/husband’s name, houses or holdings belonging to
them, means of livelihood and so on. These registers covered every person
enumerated during census of 1951.
For a person’s name to be included in the updated NRC
list of 2018, he/ she will have to furnish:
■
Existence of name in the legacy data: The legacy data is the collective
list of the NRC data of 1951 and the electoral rolls up to midnight of 24 March
1971. This is the cutoff date in the Assam Accord of 1985, agreed upon by the
Centre, the state and the All Assam Students’ Union, at the end of a six-year
movement against migration from Bangladesh.
■ Proving
linkage with the person whose name appears in the legacy data.
How is Assam different? Why a separate National
Register of Citizens?
This is because of a history of migration. During
British rule, Assam was merged with Bengal Presidency for administrative
purpose. From 1826 to 1947, the British continuously brought migrant workers to
Assam for cheap labour in tea plantations. Two major waves of migration came
after British rule — first after Partition, from East Pakistan (now
Bangladesh), and then in the aftermath of the liberation of Bangladesh in 1971.
This eventually led to an agitation during 1979-85, led by the All Assam
Students’ Union. It culminated in the 1985 Assam Accord signed with the Rajiv Gandhi government,
under which illegal migrants were to be identified and deported. Clause 6A was
inserted in the Citizenship Act with special provisions for Assam.
Why is the NRC being updated now?
Updating the NRC has been a decades-old demand, with various
modalities and cut-off dates suggested over the years and many rounds of talks
held.
Things began moving after a May 5, 2005, tripartite meeting
among the Centre, Assam government and All Assam Students' Union. Chaired by
then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, the meeting decided to update the NRC.
The Supreme Court got involved in 2009 after an NGO, Assam
Public Works, filed a writ petition for the deletion of illegal migrants' names
from voter lists in Assam.
Pilot projects for updating the NRC started in two blocks (in
Kamrup and Barpeta districts) in June 2010 but were stopped the following month
because of law-and-order problems. In July 2011, the state government set up a
cabinet subcommittee to simplify the procedure.
In May 2013, the apex court directed the Centre to finalise the
modalities by July 16, 2013. In 2014, the court directed the government to
resume updating the NRC and has since been monitoring the process.
Distribution and receipt of filled-in NRC application forms
began in 2015. Acceptance of applications ended on August 31, 2015. The
verification process started on September 1, 2015.
How is verification carried out?
The updating process started in May 2015 and ended on
31 August 2015. A total of 3.29 crore people applied through 68.31 lakh
applications. The process of verification involved house-to-house field
verification, determination of authenticity of documents, family tree
investigations in order to rule out bogus claims of parenthood and linkages and
separate hearings for married women.
Who all have been left out?
Out of the 40.07 lakh applicants who have been left
out of the final draft NRC released, on Monday, 2.48 lakh applicants have been
kept on hold including the D-Voters (doubtful voters who have been
disenfranchised on account of failure to prove citizenship), descendants of
D-voters and persons whose cases are pending before the foreigners tribunal.
The state however, has not revealed the reason for keeping others on hold.
What next?
The process of filing claims and objections will start
on 30 August, during which people whose names have been left out of the NRC
Assam, can once again appeal to have their case reconsidered. Those left out
are not yet being labelled as “foreigners” or being sent to detention centres.
However, only those applicants who had submitted their applications in 2015
will be considered.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)