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Wednesday, January 11, 2023

Current Affairs- January 4, 2023

 

INDIA

  • Supreme Court observed that all religious conversions cannot be presumed by a State to be illegal.
  • King Charles III of UK held a telephone conversation on India’s G-20 Presidency with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
  • An invertebrate survey was undertaken in the Thiruvananthapuram Wildlife Division.
  • Captain Shiva Chouhan becomes first women officer operationally deployed at Kumar Post, Siachen.
  • HC asks Delhi Government to ensure free food, treatment to poor HIV-positive persons.
  • Department of Posts releases special cover on Institute of Mathematical Sciences.
  • President Droupadi Murmu will inaugurate the 18th National Scout and Guide Jamboree in Rajasthan.
  • UIDAI introduces Head of the Family (HoF)-based online address update in Aadhar.
  • Defence Minister Rajnath Singh virtually inaugurates Bailey Suspension Bridge over river Chenab in Jammu division.

ECONOMY

  • The government kept the interest rate unchanged at 7.1 per cent for the subscribers of the General Provident Fund and other similar funds.
  • Government exempts PSUs from the minimum 25 per cent public float requirement.
  • India and Asian Development Bank sign several loan agreements to boost infrastructure sector.
  • Google alleges CCI copied parts of EU ruling on Android abuse.
  • Government raises windfall tax on crude oil, export of diesel and ATF

WORLD

  • India starts probe into circuit board dumping by China and Hong Kong
  • Ecuador, Japan, Malta, Mozambique and Switzerland replace India, Ireland, Kenya, Mexico and Norway in U.N. Security Council.
  • U.S. carries out first execution of a transgender person
  • South Korea fines Tesla USD 2.2 million for EV range exaggeration
  • Japan plans to boost financial support to households to move away from the capital city Tokyo.

SPORTS

  • Tata Open Maharashtra: India’s Ramkumar Ramanathan enters doubles quarter-finals.
  • BCCI floats tender to own and operate a Women’s IPL team.
  • Ranji Trophy: Saurashtra captain Jaydev Unadkat became the first bowler to take a hat-trick in the first over.

Swachh Survekshan Grameen 2023 Toolkit

 Swachh Survekshan Grameen 2023 Toolkit was launched at the Technical Session on “Rural WASH Partnerships – the way forward”


About the Technical Session on “Rural WASH Partnerships – the way forward”

  • Technical Session on “Rural WASH Partnerships – the way forward” was organized on the second day of the 7th India Water Week.
  • It was organized by the Department of Drinking Water & Sanitation (DDWS), which comes under the aegis of the Union Ministry of Jal Shakti.
  • The technical session, chaired by Minister of Jal Shakti, focused on how collaborations with academia, experts and others in WASH sector can help achieve the goals of two flagship programmes of the DDWS – the Jal Jeevan Mission and Swachh Bharat Mission Grameen Phase II.
  • During the event, the toolkit for Swachh Survekshan Grameen (SSG) 2023 and a web portal for “Twinpit to Retrofit Abhiyan” was launched.

What is Swachh Survekshan Grameen?

Swachh Survekshan Grameen has been conducted by the DDWS since 2018 under the Swachh Bharat Mission. This initiative aims to rank states and districts based on their performance on key quantitative and qualitative Swachh Bharat Mission (Grameen) parameters that assesses the sanitation status of rural regions in India.

Swachh Survekshan Grameen 2023 is set to be conducted by the DDWS, in a more competitive and participatory manner. The Swachh Survekshan Grameen 2023 Toolkit has information related to the various stages of assessment, baseline rankings of the panchayats and districts based on their ODF plus progress recorded in the SBM-G Integrated Management Information System (IMIS).

What is India Water Week?

The India Water Week is organized every year by the Jal Shakti Ministry. The 7th edition was inaugurated on November 1, 2022 at the India Expo Centre in Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh. The DDWS has set up 20 stalls at the India Water Week 2022, focusing on state-of-the-art WASH technologies, innovations and solutions. The EU, Finland, Germany and Israel have taken part in this event.

The power of the PIL

 Unfortunately, the age-old proverb, ‘justice delayed is justice denied’, remains relevant today


When Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer and Justice P.N. Bhagwati of the Supreme Court pioneered the concept of public interest litigation in India in the 1980s, little did they know about the far-reaching consequences of their initiative. Whereas political executives are yet to digest ‘judicial activism’, members of civil society, who were not directly involved in a particular case, got a chance to agitate in the court on matters relating to public interest.

Those who suffered silently in organised violence rarely got justice in the past. In March 1970, when the brothers of the Sain family of Burdwan were brutally killed by the Left cadres, the violence shook the conscience of the nation. In August 1971, nearly 100 youths having allegiance to leftists were killed over a span of 30 hours in Calcutta’s Baranagar. The culprits were never brought to book and the families never got back the bodies of the dead. In April 1982, 16 monks and a nun of Ananda Marga were dragged out of their vehicles simultaneously in three different places on and around Bijon Setu in Calcutta in broad daylight, beaten to death, and then set on fire, sending shivers down the spine of civil society. None of these incidents witnessed an effective inquiry; no one was booked; the administration colluded with the goons to sweep the crimes under the carpet.

If any such horror were to take place today, sympathisers of the sufferers would have filed a PIL in high court, seeking a court-monitored inquiry by the Central investigating agency so as to book the propagators of the crime. That’s the power of the PIL, which gave the requisite strength and direction to the judiciary. There have been so many riots in past but for the first time after the Delhi riot (1984) and, subsequently, after the riot at Godhra in Gujarat (2002), those who indulged in organising the violence were booked. We have heard of so many cases of corruption at the highest levels; for the first time, the all-powerful former chief ministers of Bihar and Haryana had to go to jail after their conviction on charges of corruption. If these were indications of ‘judicial activism’, civil society looks forward to such activism from the judiciary at a time when the bitterness of competitive politics has divided society.

In a bid to control the judiciary, political executives are critical of the collegiums system that empowers the Supreme Court to select the judges of the higher judiciary. There is sufficient scope to check the integrity of the persons proposed to be appointed in the existing process by the government through the Central Bureau of Investigation. Yet, political bosses demand that the system of ‘appointing judges by the judges’ should end. If the collegium system is replaced by a system of selection by the Union government, there is every possibility that the people’s perception of the judiciary being neutral will be jeopardised.

However, this does not mean that everything is fine with the judicial system. We need to have an objective assessment of the productivity of the higher judiciary. Do we need so many long vacations in the courts when nearly 60,000 cases are reportedly pending in the Supreme court itself ? It is learnt that the apex court has 193 working days in a year; high courts have 210 days. While assessing productivity, we need not go by the practices being followed in Australia or in the United States of America. We should have our own norms as in any other profession. There have been numerous initiatives by the government towards the computerization of court work and for making virtual hearings a reality. More needs to be done in this sphere to raise the output of the judges.

Judges are amply compensated for their notable contributions. Society may thus legitimately expect that the members of the higher judiciary also give their best to ensure quick disposal of cases without compromising the quality of verdicts. Unfortunately, the age-old proverb, ‘justice delayed is justice denied’, remains relevant today.

Gautam Bhattacharya

Source: The Telegraph, 10/01/23

What is delegated legislation

 In upholding the Centre’s 2016 decision on demonetisation, one of the key questions to decide for the Supreme Court was whether Parliament gave excessive powers to the Centre under the law to demonetise currency. While the majority ruling upheld the validity of the delegated legislation, the dissenting verdict noted that excessive delegation of power is arbitrary. What is delegated legislation?

What is delegated legislation?

Parliament routinely delegates certain functions to authorities established by law since every aspect cannot be dealt with directly by the law makers themselves. This delegation of powers is noted in statutes, which are commonly referred to as delegated legislations.The delegated legislation would specify operational details, giving power to those executing the details. Regulations and by-laws under legislations are classic examples of delegated legislation. A 1973 Supreme Court ruling explains the concept as: “The practice of empowering the Executive to make subordinate legislation within a prescribed sphere has evolved out of practical necessity and pragmatic needs of a modern welfare State. At the same time it has to be borne in mind that our Constitution-makers have entrusted the power of legislation to the representatives of the people, so that the said power may be exercised not only in the name of the people but also by the people speaking through their representatives. The role against excessive delegation of legislative authority flows from and is a necessary postulate of the sovereignty of the people.”

What was the delegation of power in the demonetisation case?

Section 26(2) of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 essentially gives powers to the Centre to notify that a particular denomination of currency ceases to be legal tender.

The provision reads: “On recommendation of the Central Board the Central Government may, by notification in the Gazette of India, declare that, with effect from such date as may be specified in the notification, any series of bank notes of any denomination shall cease to be legal tender.” Here, Parliament, which enacted the RBI Act, is essentially delegating the power to alter the nature of legal tender to the central government. The Centre exercised that power by issuing a gazette notification, which is essentially the legislative basis for the demonetisation exercise.

Why was this challenged?

The petitioner’s challenge was this: “In the event that Section 26(2) is held to permit demonetization, does it suffer from excessive delegation of legislative power thereby rendering it ultra vires the Constitution?”

The Constitution gives law-making powers to the Parliament. While operational aspects can be delegated to statutory bodies, essential powers cannot be delegated. Also, the delegation must be with sufficient guidelines on how the power can be used. The petitioners in the demonetisation case argued that since Section 26(2) contains no policy guidelines on how the Centre can exercise its powers, it is arbitrary and therefore, unconstitutional.

Why is excessive delegation power an issue?

A 1959 landmark ruling in Hamdard Dawakhana v Union of India, the Supreme Court had struck down delegation of powers on the grounds that it was vague. A Constitution Bench considered the validity of certain provisions of the Drug and Magic Remedies (Objectionable Advertisements) Act that prohibited advertisements of certain drugs for treatment of certain diseases and dealt with the powers of search, seizure and entry.

The Court held that the central government’s power of specifying diseases and conditions as given in Section 3(d) is ‘uncanalised’, ‘uncontrolled’, and going beyond the permissible boundaries of valid delegation. Hence, the same was deemed unconstitutional.

“The question for decision then is, is the delegation constitutional in that the administrative authority has been supplied with proper guidance. In our view the words impugned are vague. Parliament has established no criteria, no standards and has not prescribed any principle on which a particular disease or condition is to be specified in the Schedule. It is not stated what facts or circumstances are to be taken into consideration to include a particular condition or disease,” the Court had said. The Court applies the “policy and guideline” test to decide the constitutionality of the delegated legislation.

The Attorney General for India argued that the RBI Act itself has guidance for exercise of delegated powers. He cited the Preamble and Section 3 of the Act as guidance on the purpose of the law and the Centre’s role in “regulating” monetary policy.

Section 3 deals with establishment and incorporation of Reserve Bank.

What did the Court decide?

The majority verdict held that since the delegation of power is to the Centre which is anyway answerable to the Parliament, the delegation power cannot be struck down.

“In case the Executive does not act reasonably while exercising its power of delegated legislation, it is responsible to Parliament who are elected representatives of the citizens for whom there exists a democratic method of bringing to book the elected representatives who act unreasonably in such matters,” the court said. The dissenting opinion, however, disagreed with this view. First, Justice BV Nagarathna held that Centre could not have exercised its delegated powers because Section 26(2) of the RBI only gives powers to the Centre when the recommendation is “initiated” by the RBI Central Board.From a reading of the record presented by the Centre, the judge held that it is clear that the proposal originated from the Centre and therefore the Centre could not have drawn its powers to demonetise from Section 26(2).

The dissenting view also held that, even if the Centre has the power under Section 26(2) allowing for demonetisation of “any” notes is a vast power that is arbitrary and therefore unconstitutional.

“The Central Government in its wisdom may also initiate the process of demonetisation as has been done in the instant case. But what is important and to be noted is that the said power cannot be exercised by the mere issuance of an executive notification in the Gazette of India. In other words, when the proposal to demonetise any currency note is initiated by the Central Government with or without the concurrence of the Central Board of the Bank, it is not an exercise of the executive power of the Central Government under subsection (2) of Section 26 of the Act. In such a situation, as already held, the Central Government would have to resort to the legislative process by initiating a plenary legislation in the Parliament,” the dissenting opinion stated. Justice Nagarathna emphasised that demonetisation of all series of notes, at the instance of the central government, is far more serious than the demonetisation of particular series by the bank, mandating the need for a legislation as opposed to an executive action.

Source: Indian Express, 10/01/23

Monday, January 09, 2023

Quote of the Day January 9, 2023

 

“Are you bored with life? Then throw yourself into some work you believe in with all your heart, live for it, die for it, and you will find happiness that you had thought could never be yours.”
Dale Carnegie
“क्या आप ज़िन्दगी से ऊब चुके हैं? तो स्वयं को ऐसे काम में झोंक दें जिसमें आप दिल से यकीन रखते हों, उसके लिए जिएं, उसके लिए मरें, और आप ऐसी खुशी पाएंगें जो आप सोचते थे कि कभी आपको नहीं मिल सकती है।”
डेल कार्नेगी

Schemes of Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region

 The Centre has approved the continuation of schemes of the Ministry of Development of Northeastern Region (DoNER) with an outlay of Rs 12,882 crore for the balance period of the 15th Finance Commission (2022-23 to 2025-26).

DoNER Minister G Kishan Reddy announced at a press conference that the approved schemes will be extended for the balance period of the 15th Finance Commission, a decision that was made at a meeting of the Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday. The extension will allow for better planning in terms of project selection and front-loading of projects during the scheme period.


Outlays for Specific DoNER Schemes

The outlay for the North East Special Infrastructure Scheme (NESIDS) will be Rs 8,139.5 crore, including the committed liabilities of ongoing projects, according to the Expenditure Finance Committee’s recommendations. The outlay for the ‘Schemes of NEC’ will be Rs 3,202.7 crore, including the committed liabilities of ongoing projects. The outlay for special packages for the Bodoland Territorial Council, the Dima Hasao Autonomous Territorial Council, and the Karbi Anglong Autonomous Territorial Council in Assam is Rs 1,540 crore, including the committed liabilities of ongoing projects.

NESIDS, a central sector scheme with 100% central funding, has been restructured to include two components: NESIDS (roads) and NESIDS (other than road infrastructure).

Objectives of DoNER Ministry Schemes

  • The DoNER ministry’s schemes aim to supplement the efforts of various central ministries and departments on one hand and address the needs of the North-eastern states on the other hand, for uncovered development and welfare activities.
  • The schemes provide gap-filling support to the eight states in the region based on their felt needs by taking up projects that develop infrastructure to mitigate connectivity and social sector deficits, and enhance livelihood and employment opportunities in the region.
  • The five pillars of the Aatmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan for a self-reliant India – economy, infrastructure, system, vibrant demography, and demand – will also get a boost through the DoNER schemes, according to Reddy.

Budget Allocations for DoNER Schemes

The actual expenditure in the last four years under DoNER schemes was Rs 7,534.46 crore, while the fund available for expenditure in the next four years until 2025-26 is Rs 19,482.2 crore. There has been a 370% increase in the average annual budget allocation, totaling Rs 9,970 crore, in the last eight years compared to the average annual budget allocation of Rs 2,122 crore during 2009-14.

Infrastructure Development in the North-eastern Region

  • Efforts have been made to improve infrastructure in the Northeastern region, with a focus on improving connectivity. For improving railway connectivity, Rs 51,019 crore have been spent since 2014. A total of 19 new projects worth Rs 77,930 crore have been sanctioned.
  • For improving road connectivity, 375 projects worth Rs 1.05 lakh crore are underway. In the next three years, the government will lay 9,476 kilometers of roads under 209 projects, with the Centre spending Rs 1,06,004 crore on this effort.
  • Air connectivity has also improved significantly in the Northeastern region. In the last eight years, the number of airports in the region has increased from 9 to 17, and air traffic movement has increased by over 200%.

In addition to infrastructure development, the DoNER ministry is also working on various other initiatives to boost the region’s development, including promoting entrepreneurship, skill development, and tourism.

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents

 

Vol. 58, Issue No. 1, 07 Jan, 2023