-News on Air The Food security Bill finalised by the National Advisory Council will be brought to Parliament shortly for approval. The draft bill entitles 75 percent of the population to highly subsidised food grains. It provides for people living Below Povery Line getting rice at three rupees a kilogram and wheat at two rupees a kilogram. The Bill proposes that general households will have the right to 20 kilograms...
More »SEARCH RESULT
‘Honour killing': Court orders Haryana to pay compensation
-PTI The Punjab and Haryana High Court has directed the Haryana Government to pay a compensation of Rs.6 lakh to the mother of a young man who was killed on the diktat of akhap panchayat (illegal village court) for marrying a girl belonging to the same ‘gotra' (lineage). Manoj, 23, of Kaithal and his newly-wed wife Babli, 19, were killed in Kaithal district in 2007 allegedly on the diktat of Khap or...
More »Jean Dreze, economist interviewed by Ullekh NP
Jean Dreze, until recently the intellectual driving force behind the National Advisory Council , is measured but unmistakable in his disenchantment with many current UPA welfare schemes. The economist who quit the Sonia Gandhi-led NAC in late June, won't comment on whether the UPA government has failed the NAC. But, he tells Ullekh NP, there's not enough empathy in the Indian establishment for the poor. Programmes like NREGA, he says, attract...
More »PM okays food bill draft, to cover 75% population by Zia Haq
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Thursday approved the final draft food security bill. The bill, when passed, will provide cheaper foodgrain to 75% of the population, or 900 million Indians. This is much higher than what a PM-appointed panel recommended, but is lower than the 90% coverage sought by the Sonia Gandhi-led National Advisory Council (NAC). To cover 90% of the population under a food law, the Centre will have to...
More »Pinstripewallah Partner by Neelabh Mishra
There’s no outrage when law, policy are outsourced to corporates IN order to get our perspective on issues of national importance right, we could do well to turn our ears from the din created by vested interests. The unduly vehement questioning of the process of concerned citizens (or “civil society”) engaging in legislative and policy consultations is exactly the sort of noise we must not allow to deflect our attention...
More »