bmr_Banner (1) rajugari (1) bmr_Banner (1)

Rakul Preeth Sing selling vegetables in Hyderabad

Hot heroine Rakul Preeth Sing is selling vegetables at KPHB today. For a TV program to be facilitated by her friend Manchu Lakshmi. Ma

Year End Polls - 2015

voting completed and see results for your best favorite tollywood actors ,actresses, movies ,technicians, songs in 2015

Telugu film turns 85 years old today......!

Bhakta prahlada is the 1st movie in Telugu film industry, it was released on February 6th, 1932. By this Telugu film has completed 84yea

Chiranjeevi Arrested at Rajahmundry Airport

Chiranjeevi who has recently submitted an open letter to the AP government with regards to the Kapu reservation was in a shock today w

Kshanam Movie Theatrical Trailer

Kshanam Movie Theatrical Trailer .....

Fans Advice To Sudheer Babu

We know Sudheer Babu was a badminton player but after watching him bat in this latest CCL 6, fans are feeling that he should have taken cricket as his profession.See how SB respond to these suggestions o..

Showing posts with label Communal Violence Bill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Communal Violence Bill. Show all posts

Friday, 6 December 2013

Modi writes to fellow CMs, asks them to oppose Communal Violence Bill

BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi on Friday wrote letters to some chief ministers urging them to rise above political affiliations and oppose the Centre's proposed Communal Violence Bill, alleging it was "a blatant intrusion upon the powers" of state governments.

"It is important for all Chief Ministers to rise beyond political affiliations and come together to oppose the Bill, which is nothing but a blatant attempt by the Centre to interfere with and intrude upon the powers of elected state governments," Modi, Gujarat Chief Minister, said in the letters to the CMs.

The Bill, he said, would polarise the society and would introduce the idea of differential application of criminal law to citizens based on religious and linguistic identities.

It would also demoralise public servants and impact how the state government can deal with law and order situations in future, Modi said.

The recipients of Friday's letter include Shivraj Singh Chouhan (Madhya Pradesh), Prithviraj Chavan (Maharashtra), Okram Ibobi Singh (Manipur) and Mukul Sangma (Meghalaya) among others, officials said.

Modi's letters to the CMs came a day after he written to the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on the issue, terming the Bill as "recipe for disaster".

The UPA government plans to introduce the 'Prevention of Communal Violence (Access to Justice and Reparations) Bill, 2013' in the ongoing winter session of Parliament.

In his letter, Modi has called upon his counterparts in other states to discuss the issue and oppose the Bill.


Thursday, 5 December 2013

Communal Violence Bill a recipe for disaster: Modi

Questioning the timing of bringing the Communal Violence Bill, Narendra Modi on Thursday wrote to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, describing the proposed legislation as “ill-conceived, poorly drafted and a recipe for disaster”.
Terming the bill as an attempt to encroach upon the domain of states, the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate sought wider consultations among various stakeholders, such as state governments, political parties, police and security agencies, before making any move on the issue.
Mr. Modi’s letter comes on the morning of beginning of the winter session of Parliament in which the bill is likely to be taken up.
“Communal Violence Bill is ill-conceived, poorly drafted and a recipe for disaster,” Mr. Modi said in his letter.
The Gujarat Chief Minister said, “the timing to bring the bill is suspicious owing to political considerations and vote bank politics, rather than genuine concerns”.
Expressing strong concern that the proposed legislation would further divide people on religious and linguistic lines, Mr. Modi said, “religious and linguistic identities would become more reinforced and even ordinary incidents of violence would be given a communal colour thus giving the opposite result of what the bill intends to achieve“.
He also brought out various “operational issues” in the proposed Prevention of Communal Violence (Access to Justice and Reparations) Bill, 2013.
“For example, Section 3(f) that defines ‘hostile environment’, is wide-ranging, vague and open to misuse.
Likewise, the definition of communal violence under Section 3 (d) read with Section 4 would raise questions on whether the Centre is introducing the concept of ‘thought crime’ in the context of the Indian criminal jurisprudence,” the letter said.
Mr. Modi wrote in his letter to the Prime Minister that these provisions have not been examined from the view of the Evidence Act.
“The move to make public servants, police and security agencies criminally liable can adversely impact the morale of our law and order enforcement agencies and it may also make them vulnerable to political victimisation,” Mr.Modi said.
He also criticised the manner in which the Centre was bringing the communal violence bill, saying it showed no consideration for the nation’s federal structure.
“Law and order is an issue under the State List and (if) it is something that would have to be implemented by the state governments, then it should be legislated by the state governments,” the letter said.
Mr. Modi said if there was something the Centre wished to share, it was free to prepare a “model bill” and circulate it among various state governments for their consideration.
On the proposal to bring the National Human Rights Commission and and SHRC into the process of exercising powers that are vested in the executive wing of an elected government, Modi felt these bodies are already empowered under the existing statute to deal with serious human rights violations during incidents of communal violence.
“Burdening these bodies with redressal of all issues, handling of appeals and monitoring individual incidents is neither practical nor desirable. Thus, the role of the NHRC and the SHRC should pertain to their present roles under the existing laws,” Mr. Modi said.
Welcoming the establishment of a Communal Violence Reparation Fund, Mr. Modi, said use of the word ‘compensation’ was arguable, and added, “the government should leave the issues of compensation to the competent courts and should instead provide ex-gratia relief/assistance to provide immediate relief and succour to the victims“.
“The introduction of compensation for ‘moral injury’ under the bill is strange and it does not take into account implementability,” Mr. Modi said.
“As chief minister of a government that is sensitive to the issue of communal violence and a state that has been riot-free for over a decade now, I agree that there is a need to be vigilant on communal violence but the contents and timing of the bill are suspicious,” he said.