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India's VoteGate? EVM ghotala.-- ECI, scrap EVMs.


Centre, don't devastate southern coastline with Sethu project -- S. Kalyanaraman

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Centre backs Sethu project -- Pramila Krishnan, DC

Chennai, Sept. 16, 2013

Environmentalists and marine biologists are aghast at the stand taken by the Centre before the Supreme Court that it wished to go ahead with the Sethudamudram Ship Channel Project (SSCP) in the original form, thereby rejecting the RK Pachauri Committee report that had recommended an alternative alignment since the proposed channel through the eco-sensitive Rama Sethu (Adam's Bridge) was not feasible economically and ecologically.

The affidavit filed by the Union Ministry of Shipping in the apex court is inspired more by 'greed and vote-bank plitics', they said, expressing the fear that the Centre's stand was against national interests and would most certainly cause irreparable and irreversible damage to the Gulf of Mannar biosphere.
Expressing shock that the Centre could now rubbish its own (Pachauri) expert committee, eminet environmentalist Dr. S. Kalyanaraman said, 'For the Government of India to now reject it own committee's report makes a mockery of the rule of law in this country.'

The responsibility of a nation, he pointed out, was to respect its own guidelines for approving projects. The law required that environmental impact analysis should be carried out for every project. The Pachauri committee thus constituted had gone into the environmental issues after studying for two years and came up with 'an emphatic conclusion that this project is not ecologically feasible.'

'Nature is protecting us from various disasters free of cost. We should not harm it for a pittance that we may earn by diverting the ships through the Sethusamudram project. If we calculate the loss of biodiversity in terms of money, it is higher than any amount of money you could imagine earned through this project', said Prof. M. Arunachalam, head of Sri Parama Kalyani center for environmental sciences at the Manmohan Sundarnar University.

'The Sethu bridge lies in ecologically sensitive area and it is also cyclone prone, particularly during the northeast monsoon. Apart from that, the Environmental Impact Assessment report for the project was carried out using secondary data and old published reports. The present marine ecosystem was not studied for evaluating the project'.

Marine economists argue that the Sethu project is not the only option for moving goods between the east coast and the west. Container ports could be built at Vizhinjam, Cochin and Tuticorin and freight corriors established from there through the rest of the country. Similarly pipelines could be laid for transporting oil and gas from the western ports to the east. 'Why go into a project which will benefit only a very few navigating vessels carrying less than 30,000 tonnes because of the very shallow waters of Gulf of Mannar?' wondered Dr. Kalyanaraman.

IIM, Bangalore had done an economic analysis of the Sethu project and found it was not economically feasible. Also, geologists have reported that the region is a fragile marine reserve subject to volcanic and tectonic activity. Globally famous tsunami expert Tad S. Murthy had cautioned that cutting through Adam's Bridge would case devastation of the coastline from Nagapattinam to Kollam in the event of a tsunami.

http://www.dc-epaper.com/PUBLICATIONS/DC/DCC/2013/09/17/ArticleHtmls/AGAINST-PACHAURI-COMMISSION-Centre-backs-Sethu-project-17092013004037.shtml?Mode=1

Experts oppose Sethu Shipping Canal Project



DC | 27th Aug 2013
Chennai: Several scientists, ecological experts and representatives of Coastal Action Network (CAN) on Monday reiterated their opposition to Sethu Shipping Canal Project (SSCP).
Retired navy captain H. Balakrishnan citing  several reports told mediapersons  that the Palk Bay — Gulf of Mannar areas were not only fragile with respect to tectonic movements but also highly sensitive to higher heat flow and vulnerable to future earthquakes.
He also demanded fresh study of the project by two teams, first by experts in geology, geophysics, remote sensing, seismology, biology, oceanography and environment from organizations and universities to review all available data from the aforesaid disciplines and their relevance to SSCP.
The second team comprising experts of government organizations ought to carry out studied as recommended by the first committee within a stipulated time-frame, Mr Balakrishnan added comparing TN government’s demand to declare as Adam’s Bridge as heritage site and their demand to declare Adam’s bridge as international geographical heritage site.
Agreeing the conclusions of Pachauri Committee Report, K Gopalakrishnan, retired director of Geological Suvey of India, insisted that studies on sand migration and sedimentation were not enough and sought further analysis before allowing work to begin in SSCP.
Picking holes in the env­ironment impact asse­ss­ment report, particularly the size of the sample in Palk Bay, professor M. Aru­nachalam of Man­on­mani­yam Sundaranar Univer­ sity said the accretion of sediment and erosion was done by studying a narrow stretch of 2km in Palk Bay and it was evident that there was lack of data on the process of sedimentation on which the entire EIA was based.
Expressing concern over the impact the project would have on the livelihood of the coastal communities, M. Jeeva of Movement Against SSCP, said the government of Tamil Nadu had sought the withdrawal of the project in the Supreme Court only after factoring in project impacts.

http://www.deccanchronicle.com/130827/news-current-affairs/article/experts-oppose-sethu-shipping-canal-project

See: http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2013/09/centre-rejects-pachauri-panel-report.html

Tamil conference scam: Karunanidhi faces vigilance probe

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Classical Tamil conference of 2010: Karunanidhi now faces vigilance probe

, TNN | Sep 16, 2013, 11.10 PM IST

CHENNAI: The Madras high court has ordered vigilance probe into a complaint, which alleged that former chief minister M Karunanidhi had misappropriated funds meant for the classical Tamil conference held in Coimbatore in June 2010. 

Justice R Mala, before whom the direction petition of advocate B Ramesh Babu, came up for hearing on Tuesday, said expeditious inquiry should be conducted into the allegation, and that a case should be registered if commission of any cognizable offence is made out. 

According to Ramesh Babu, while the then chief minister Karunanidhi claimed that a total of Rs 380 crore was spent on the conference, a later press release claimed that Rs 301 crore had been spent on the meet. Information obtained under the Right to Information Act revealed that only Rs 151.22 crore had been spent on various counts. Another RTI plea to the Tamil Development Department revealed that Rs 262.63 crore was spent on the meet. 

Ramesh Babu claimed that Karunanidhi and his associates, including his daughter Kanimozhi, had misappropriated more than Rs 200 crore, and wanted vigilance inquiry into the allegations. 

When the matter was taken up for hearing, state public prosecutor S Shanmugavelayutham said the government had forwarded the complaint to the DVAC for a detailed inquiry. The agency has already appointed Mohammed Ismail, deputy superintendent of police, to hold inquiry and submit a report, he said. The DSP has already commenced his inquiry, Shanmugavelayutham told the court.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/chennai/Classical-Tamil-conference-of-2010-Karunanidhi-now-faces-vigilance-probe/articleshow/22635791.cms

Next crisis in India's banking system -- Adit Rustomjee

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An employee counts Indian rupee notes at a cash counter inside a bank in Agartala. Reuters
Dr Rajan, your next crisis is coming up in banking system 12 mins ago Sept. 17, 2013 7:46 am By Adil Rustomjee

 “The primary role of the central bank…is monetary stability, that is, to sustain confidence in the value of the country’s money. Ultimately, this means low and stable expectations of inflation…”. Or so said Raghuram Rajan, the new RBI Governor, in his first statement after taking over. But he has a problem rushing at him – and it’s not really about the rupee. The next lurch downwards in India’s financial crisis will come from the country’s banking system. The centre of gravity of the economic situation – the focus of policymakers’ attention – will move gradually from the currency markets to the nation’s banks. India’s system of repressed financing in the banking system will be exposed to its rotten core.  Recently, a 100 basis points (1 percent) rise in bond yields resulted in Rs 40,000 crore in bond losses that were swept under the carpet as the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) gave them “relief” in the form of mark-to-market waivers. Further rises in bond yields could  result in as much as Rs 100,000 crore in bond portfolio losses. An employee counts Indian rupee notes at a cash counter inside a bank in Agartala. Reuters This is besides the non-performing loans of about Rs 100,000 crore that will come up as the economy tanks.  Just six mid-sized companies – KS Oils, Kingfisher, and Deccan Chronicle among them – account for Rs 30,000 crore of this figure. Surely it is reasonable to assume that India’s over 6,000 public companies, almost a million private companies, and individuals, will account for the rest. The non-performing loan figure is also contingent on the RBI not providing further “relief” by fudging the non-performing loan recognition norms to suit banks. The grand total on the above two items will come to about Rs 200,000 crore. This will, in effect, wipe out a big chunk of the net worth of the banking system and force the government – which is going broke anyways – to recapitalise banks. Forget Basel 3, 4, or whatever. Recapitalising outside of the Basel 3 framework will itself be an almost impossible task. Consider the following. The banking system’s basic job in India is not lending as much as financing the government’s deficit. So, the Congress blows out the government’s expenditure with welfare programmes that are driven by the need for political gain. The government is basically putting in place the building blocks of the Indian welfare state, in a country that cannot afford it. Each building block is put in place every five years, just before a general election. NREGA, farm loan waivers, Food Security – the list goes on.  The government is using the political business cycle very effectively. Then there are the assorted subsidies. The government, in effect, is bribing the people with the people’s own money. The combination of subsidies and welfare programmes results in unsustainable domestic absorption. All this has to be financed through fiscal spending by the government, leading to large fiscal deficits. The fiscal deficit itself has to be financed. Much of the financing comes through the Indian banking system. The government does this through something called the “statutory liquidity ratio,” or SLR. The “statutory ratio” means that Indian banks are forced to use 23 percent of their deposits – net demand and time liabilities – to buy government securities (g-secs) and fund the fiscal deficit. That’s nearly a quarter of your money and mine that goes into this exercise. The banking system is thus forced to fund the government’s fiscal deficit at what – for the government at least – are very favourable rates. This system of repressed financing has been continuing in India for years. Remember also it’s not just the banks – the insurance companies and pension companies have their own “statutory ratios” to comply with. Needless to say, with the government having first claim on India’s limited capital pool at very favourable concessional rates of interest, the remaining capital has to get bid for by the private sector at higher rates. The private sector finds it difficult to do so at higher rates, and so gets “crowded out”. Consequently, the cost of capital – the interest rate – remains permanently high. Positive net present value projects start getting unviable at the margin. Investment activity collapses. Sounds familiar? Lazy banking Remember, however, that this suits the banks too. India’s banking system is basically owned by the Indian government. As much as 75 percent of it, in fact.  With the government as the owner, the banking system is subject to severe “principal-agent” problems. Without getting into complicated explanations of principal-agent problems, consider its stylised result. If India’s public sector bankers make a good loan, they just continue making their small fixed salaries. If they make a bad loan, the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) sits on their heads, and starts investigations. Naturally, with this sort of  tradeoff, the  tendency is to make almost no loans at all. So what do the banks do with the money you and I deposit in the banking system? Banks simply loan a big chunk of it to the government by buying the government’s paper, and funding its fiscal deficit. In fact, the banks park more than the government’s “statutory ratio” requirement in the g-secs market. India’s system of repressed financing is actually for the banks’ benefit too. This results in what (former RBI Deputy Governor) Rakesh Mohan memorably called “lazy banking”. This is the tendency of the Indian banking system to just fund the government, rather than get on with the hard job of finding good companies and  individuals to lend to. This system is doubly profitable for the banks because of their access to low-cost current and savings account deposits, and because of the oligopolistic cartelisation of the banking system. To understand this, remember hundreds of millions of Indians have current and savings accounts (CASA) on which the banking system pays little to no interest. The current accounts pay no interest, and the savings accounts had regulated interest rates of 4 percent till recently. The RBI deregulated the savings account interest rates, and banks are technically free to pay what they wish. An oligopoly But remember also that the banking system is a closed oligopolistic cartel. Despite the savings bank account rates being freed, banks – barring a handful – have held on to interest rates at 4 percent. Self serving rationalisations are routinely spouted by bankers on the media channels justifying this situation. So the banks get money from the Indian public through current and savings accounts, on which they pay negligible interest, and lend on to the Indian government at yields of x8 percent. This is one of the neatest carry trades in financial history. The trade is even more profitable because of the very low risk weights assigned to g-secs. The weights are so low – just 2.5 percent of the full capital ratio – that banks have to set aside a very low amount of their capital for lending to the government. Remember also that the change in the Indian savings rate funded this for years. Higher savings entered the system, the government confiscated it through the g-secs market, blew it up on subsidies and welfare schemes, but in the following years the savings rate went up even more, which allowed the system to continue. Unfortunately, the savings growth rate is negative, and the government’s fundamentals are collapsing. This Ponzi scheme is therefore coming to an end. “Relief, really?” Now this is a pretty spectacle. The banking system has loaded up on the Republic of India’s paper, paper that, because of the severe deterioration of the government’s finances, is in danger of being declared junk. India’s banking system has effectively loaded up on what may become junk bonds. The government’s paper was supposed to be risk-free, backed by the “full faith and credit” of the Indian government. But guess what? It turns out the Indian government is not risk-free, and it inspires little “faith and credit”. Notice that the Indian government is slowly going bust, funding the welfare programmes and assorted subsidies. As a result, like any borrower whose financials are deteriorating and whose paper is publicly traded, the prices of g-secs should fall and yields should rise (prices and yields move in opposite directions). It turns out, there is only so much repression one can do even in a repressed market. The terrorized folks who call themselves bond traders in Mumbai have a “daddy knows best “ attitude towards the RBI -  brought about by years of financial repression. But even they can be pushed only to a point. Push them more, and they start becoming bond market vigilantes. Something like that may happen in India going forward. In fact, India needs the bloodless discipline of the bond market to put its finances in order. Presently, instead of that discipline, every time bond yields rise, the RBI throws a set of rules at the bond market, that only the RBI seems to understand. As yields rise and bond prices fall, the banking system will get exposed to massive mark-to-market losses on its bond investments. Something like this happened this August, with a rise in yields of 100 basis points. This resulted in almost Rs 40,000 crore in losses on banks’ bond portfolios, a big chunk of the entire banking sector’s annual profits. A harbinger of things to come. When this happened,  what did the banks do ? They ran to the RBI, for something called “relief”. The RBI promptly provided “relief”. The g-sec bond portfolios are held by banks in various buckets – available for sale (AFS) and held to maturity (HTM) and so on. In fact, there are so many buckets that soon we will certainly have an ABC and XYZ bucket too. So some bureaucrat at the RBI changed the proportion that could be parked in various buckets, changed a percentage here, and an accounting rule there, and guess what?  Rs 40,000 crore in mark-to-market losses disappeared! This is wonderful, marvelous, amazing. When g-sec bond prices go up, the banks make profits on their bond portfolios. When they fall, the banks should make losses. But no. They don’t make losses. They get “relief” and the losses magically disappear! Aaaall is well. The Ponzi scheme is kept on the road. It is this sort of nonsense that offends my old fashioned Parsi sense of propriety. It is also the reason the outside world loses confidence in us. The result of all this hera pheri is bank balance-sheets in India are opaque and bizarre. They simply cannot be trusted. The banks have effectively “captured” the RBI into regulating the banks the way the banks see fit, and not necessarily the way in which the RBI desires. This is classic regulatory capture, if you will, an idea first articulated by Joseph Stigler. The RBI is playing along as the consequences of a systemic banking crisis are unthinkable. After all, if that happens, the RBI will be left to pick up the pieces. A rise in g-sec yields, to 10 or 10.5 percent (for 10-year paper) will result in close to Rs 100,000 crore in bond losses for the banking sector. This, together with the net non-performing loans of  Rs 100,000 crore – itself contingent on the RBI not fudging recognition norms to provide more “relief” -  means potential losses of Rs 200,000 crore. This, gentle reader, is a big chunk of the banking system’s net worth! India’s banking system is tottering. Forget meeting Basel accord targets. The government now has to recapitalise the banking system outside the Basel framework. And at the rate it is going, it will not have the money to buy shoelaces, let alone recapitalise the banks. Oh dear. There goes the Indian banking system. Was that a giant flushing sound you just heard? Interestingly, the Indian public is buying gold. They are doing it for other reasons, notably inflation protection. But this is not a bad habit at all, given the parlous state of banks.  This keeps a chunk of their savings out of the banking system. The public does not know all this, of course. How could they? Even the economists at the Mumbai brokerages haven’t articulated this as yet. The Indian public is doing the right deed for the wrong reason. Nice. Tall Order, Tall Man Ending India’s system of repressed financing will not be easy. The biggest stakeholder in the system – the government – has the most to lose. The new RBI Governor has his task cut out for him. Misguided efforts to tighten liquidity and raising interest rates to defend the currency puts at risk the stability of the Indian banking system. And yet rates – and yields – must rise. With inflation consistently above bond yields, India seeks to make economic history by becoming perhaps the first country in the world to control a severe inflation problem with negative real interest rates. This presents an existential dilemma. The alternative is to wing it by muddling through, and hope inflation falls. This is what the government has been doing to date with disastrous results. Most importantly, the Union of India’s pipeline to cheap concessional financing through the device of the “statutory ratio” must be cut.  The government must be made to pay the same risk-adjusted interest rates that we all do. This is the only thing that will reduce the Indian government’s profligacy. Using the FRBM – the Fiscal Responsibility and Budgetary Management Act – will not work. The government can always abrogate it, if it feels like it. This is exactly what the Congress did some years back to fund its welfare schemes and subsidies. Using the FRBM to control government spending is like giving the alcoholic the key to the cupboard where the bottle is locked up. He can always open it later.  Far better to cut the sharabi’s financial allowance, and make it difficult for him to buy his daru. Bond markets and monetary transmission will have to be overhauled to bring them into equilibrium. No less a panjandrum than the SBI Chairman was recently quoted as saying that the “effective” repo rate was at 10 percent. So now India has a repo rate set by the RBI, and an “effective” repo that is much higher, according to the SBI Chairman! Wholesale violence will have to be committed on India’s bond markets to prevent this sort of dysfunctional nonsense from manifesting itself in the future.  Mere tinkering with reform won’t do here. Ending the banks’ regulatory capture of the RBI is a process, not a goal. Of key importance, is keeping rules clear and transparent, ending all exceptions to those rules, and resisting the tendency to provide “relief” to those smooth talking bankers in their blue suits. This is easier said than done. Work will be required on improving quality in that most unglamorous of areas – government statistics. India’s economic statistics are so abysmal that it is a wonder the government can make any policy at all. Consider the most basic statistic – GDP.  GDP measured at factor cost leads to a 5 percent growth rate. Measuring it from the demand side (consumption/investment) leads to a growth rate of just over 2 percent. The same government figures measuring the same phenomenon lead to a second figure that is half the first!  Naturally, the government and the chattering classes will tom-tom the higher figure. Similarly, as Devangshu Datta has presciently pointed out in a recent Business Standard article, the government conveniently uses the WPI to deflate nominal GDP. If it used the CPI to deflate nominal GDP (even at factor cost), the growth rate falls to 2 percent again! Anecdotally, it would seem the lower figure of 2 percent is the GDP growth rate. The terrible public mood and the fact that most Indian industries are in recession – not slowdown – also points to that. Of course, the most important measure is privatisation of the nation’s banking system. This will end the chronic absurdity of most of the banking system being owned by the government in a market economy. This is a political decision that must be made in Delhi at the highest level. This may never happen, and yet it must come. Agency problems in the Indian banking sector caused by government ownership are too severe, almost terminal in fact. Consider, for example, that most of the non-performing loan problem is in the government-owned banks. All this will require monetary statesmanship of the highest calibre. And all this will require Raghuram Rajan to think of India, and not the Congress/UPA’s spending plans. Now that is a tall order for a tall man. Adil Rustomjee is an investment advisor in Mumbai.  Sensible comments are welcome at a_rustomjee@hotmail.com

http://www.firstpost.com/business/dr-rajan-your-next-crisis-is-coming-up-in-banking-system-1112429.html

42,000 forced to flee, religious sites damaged in UP riots

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42,000 forced to flee, religious sites damaged in UP riots


42,000 forced to flee, religious sites damaged in UP riots
PM Manmohan Singh and Congress president Sonia Gandhi meet villagers during a visit to Muzaffarnagar. (AFP Photo)

NEW DELHI: In a chilling reminder of the 2002 Gujarat riots, the Uttar Pradesh government on Monday informed the Supreme Court that the recent riots forced over 40,000 people to flee 94 villages in Muzaffarnagar and Shamli districts, where 44 people were killed and places of worship of Muslims and Hindus extensively damaged.

Responding to the apex court's queries, theAkhilesh Yadav government submitted a report from the commissioner, Saharanpur division. The Centre in its affidavit informed that the riots displaced over 41,829 persons. "There are 26,909 stranded persons in Muzaffarnagar and 14,920 in Shamli," it said.

The commissioner, Bhuvnesh Kumar, indicated that it was a well orchestrated communal conflagration where rioters targeted Muslims or Hindus, whichever was in minority in a locality. Places of worship of both Muslims and Hindus were destroyed, he said in his September 13 report to the principal secretary (home).

"In these incidents, people from both communities were killed and several people were injured. In these incidents, the families of such persons were targeted who were residing in those areas in limited numbers. Their houses, places of worships were subjected to arson, damage and demolition," the commissioner said.

The UP government's affidavit, filed through advocate Ravi Mehrotra, said efforts were on to estimate the damage to places of worship to work out a plan for their reconstruction.

"State government has issued directions to the district magistrates of all districts in Saharanpur and Meerut divisions to evaluate the damage to movable and immovable properties, including houses and places of worship, and also to work out an estimate for reconstruction of the same," the government said.

The commissioner's report detailed the ferocity of rioting and arson. Those who were in minority in 94 villages fled to escape the wrath of rioters and took shelter in settlements where their community was in majority.

"As a result of these incidents, villages having low population constituted 31 villages in Muzaffarnagar and 23 in Shamli, where the people left their villages due to violence, and in 40 villages in district Muzaffarnagar, people left out of fear, and they took shelter in such villages where their numbers were more," it said.

Detailing the 13 relief camps set up by the district administration to provide place of stay and food, the commissioner said, "Most of the relief camps located in district Muzaffarnagar and Shamli are located in constructed buildings like madrasas etc in which they are residing."

The UP government said it has paid compensation of Rs 10 lakh each to the kin of 27 dead - 24 in Muzaffarnagar district and three in Shamli district. It said only 13 were grievously injured and each have been paid Rs 50,000 while 20 others sustained minor injuries and were paid Rs 20,000.

However, the Centre's affidavit quoted the UP government's status report to put the toll at 44. It said 97 were injured. This means the UP government is yet to give compensation to the kin of 17 more deceased and 44 injured persons. The Centre said the police have so far arrested 2,462 persons for rioting. The court will hear petitions on the riots on September 19.

Protect Ramasetu. Scrap Sethu channel project -- Ramsetu Protection Movement

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Rameshwaram Ramsetu Protection Movement,
12, MV Naidu Street, Chennai 600031
President: S. Kalyanaraman Secretary: D. Kuppuramu

September 16, 2013

Protect Ramasetu, abandon setu channel project for national security and enhance lives of coastal people

UPA Government together with the DMK of Tamilnadu should not attempt to revive the Setu channel project which has been declared to be an ecological and economic disaster by the Pachauri Committee.

We demand that there should be increased security in the Indian Ocean region of Sethusamudram in the context of increased Chinese naval presence in the Ocean and to safeguard the maritime traffic passing through the Indian Ocean.

We demand projects be implemented URGENTLY to provide livelihood opportunities for coastal people. The context is the recent changes to Law of the Sea which extends territorial waters  beyond 20 nautical miles from the shoreline and creates a 200 nautical mile Special Maritime Economic Zone from the long shoreline of 8000 kms. of India. We demand that Marine cooperatives should be formed, fishing berths enhanced to berth larger fishing vessels, provided with air-conditioned storage facilities. Coastal people dependent upon coastal aquaculture activities should be provided with larger boats which they can navigate upto 200 nautical miles of Special Maritime Zone on three days and nights fishing and aquaculture expeditions. 

Environmentalists and marine biologists are aghast at the stand taken by the Centre before the Supreme Court that it wished to go ahead with the Sethudamudram Ship Channel Project (SSCP) in the original form, thereby rejecting the RK Pachauri Committee report that had recommended an alternative alignment since the proposed channel through the eco-sensitive Rama Sethu (Adam's Bridge) was not feasible economically and ecologically.
For the Government of India to now reject it own committee's report makes a mockery of the rule of law in this country.
The responsibility of a nation-state is to respect its own guidelines for approving projects. The law required that environmental impact analysis should be carried out for every project. The Pachauri committee thus constituted had gone into the environmental issues after studying for two years and came up with 'an emphatic conclusion that this project is not ecologically feasible.'
Marine economists argue that the Sethu project is not the only option for moving goods between the east coast and the west. Container ports could be built at Vizhinjam, Cochin and Tuticorin and freight corriors established from there through the rest of the country. Similarly pipelines could be laid for transporting oil and gas from the western ports to the east. Why go into a project which will benefit only a very few navigating vessels carrying less than 30,000 tonnes because of the very shallow waters of Gulf of Mannar?
IIM, Bangalore had done an economic analysis of the Sethu project and found it was not economically feasible. Also, geologists have reported that the region is a fragile marine reserve subject to volcanic and tectonic activity. Globally famous tsunami expert Tad S. Murthy had cautioned that cutting through Adam's Bridge would case devastation of the coastline from Nagapattinam to Kollam in the event of a tsunami.

Setuchannel project was clearly envisaged to fill the pockets of politicos and foreign dredging companies. Any effort to revive such an uneconomic and ecologically disastrous project affecting the security and safety of the coastline near the fragile Gulf of Mannar in Sethusamudram will meet with severe protests from the coastal people of Tamil Nadu. Coastal People of Tamil Nadu congratulate the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Smt. Dr. Jayalalithaa for taking a clear and unequivocal stand in the Hon'ble Supreme Court declaring cancellation of the Setuchannel project and protection for Rama setu declaring it as a National Monument. Any mischievous political attempts of UPA Government supported by DMK which has lost peoples' support will invite protests which will throw out the UPA Government from office.

Setu Samudran Canal project is indefensible on all fronts --- MG Devasahayam (2006)

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Sethu Samudram Canal Project – Indefensible on all Fronts

                                                                                             M.G.Devasahayam (2006)

SSCP : The Background

SSCP is a 153 year dream of Tamils. Commander A D Taylor from Indian Marine planned this SSCP project in the year 1860. In 1952 Sir A Ramasamy [Mudaliar] submitted a proposal and major feasibility report.

As per the present plan, the total length of SSCP would be about 260 km - about 120 km from Tuticorin Port to Adam's Bridge (in Gulf of Mannar), and about 140 km north of Rameswaram from Adam's Bridge to Bay of Bengal channel (in Palk Bay). Overall GOM and Palk Strait [PS] cover an area of 10,500 kms. The canal is being investigated for different drafts (for 9.15 m, 10.7 m and 12.8 m). In general, the canal will have a depth of 12 metres enabling 10,000 to 12,000 GRT vessels to pass through. The Government of India is proposing to dredge a width of 300 meter through 44 nautical miles long stretch. It is estimated that 32.5 million cubic meter sand will be dredged in the Adam's bridge area and around 52 million cubic meters in Palk Strait.

Geographic Location:
Gulf of Mannar [GOM] : The Gulf of Mannar [GOM] falls in the Indo-Pacific region, considered to be one of world's richest marine biological resources. The Gulf has been chosen as a biosphere reserve primarily because of its biological and ecological uniqueness. The region has a distinctive socio-economic and cultural profile shaped by its geography. It has an ancient maritime history and was famous for the production of pearls. Pearl has been an important item of our trade with the Roman Empire as early as the first century A.D., while Rameswaram, with its links in legend to the Ramayana, has been an important pilgrim centre. The region has been and continues to be famous for its production of chank (Indian conch). The GOM is famous for its chanks, although irrational chank fishing has severely depleted the stock. In addition, the biosphere reserve in the area has 17 different mangrove species. The GOM thus constitutes a live scientific laboratory of national and international value. It has 3,600 species of plants and animals that make it India's biologically richest coastal region. It is, of course, specially known for its corals, of which there are 117 species belonging to 37 genera. The GOM is a chain of shoal, called Adam's Bridge. It is an inlet of the Indian Ocean, between South Eastern India and Western Sri Lanka. The GOM is 130 km to 275 km wide and 160 km long. During high tide the seawater would raise to more than 1.2 meters above the sea level. Full of beach ridges, the GOM can be grouped into: (i) Beach ridges south of Vaigai River; (ii) Beach ridges between Kotangudi River and Palar River; (iii) Beach ridges between Palar River and Gundar River system; (iv) Beach ridges between Gundar River and Vaippar River; and (v) Beach ridges south of Vaippar River.

The total water logged land has been calculated to be 5.96 km2. Eight serious of Strand Lines can also be observed, apart from the Sea Cliff and Caves.

Adam's Bridge: Adam's Bridge is a chain of Shoal, nearly seven in all, is 30 km long. Sir Emerson Tennet in his book 'Ceylon' writes -" The barrier known as Adam's Bridge which obstructs the navigation in the canal between Ceylon and Ramad, consists of several parallel ledges of conglomerate and sand dunes, hard at the surface and growing course and soft as it descends till it rests on a bank of sand, apparently accumulated by the influence of current at the change of the monsoons". Also according to geological survey, it is apparent that Miocene Era limestone beds are under the Adams Bridge which connects Jaffna peninsula in Sri Lanka and Rameswaram in India. [Ref: The pre-history of Sri Lanka by S.U.Deraniyagala]. The legends as well as Archeological studies reveal that the first signs of human inhabitants in Sri Lanka date back to the a primitive age, about 1,750,000 years ago and the bridge´s age is also almost equivalent. This information is a crucial aspect for an insight into the mysterious legend called Ramayana, which was supposed to have taken place in tredha yuga (more than 1,700,000 years ago). In this epic, there is a mentioning about a bridge, which was built between Rameshwaram (India) and Srilankan coast under the supervision of a dynamic and invincible figure called Rama who is supposed to be the incarnation of the supreme. This information may not be of much importance to the archeologists who are interested in exploring the origins of man, but it is sure to open the spiritual gates of the people of the world to have come to know an ancient history linked to the Indian mythology.

Palk Strait [PS]: PS is an inlet of Bay of Bengal. The PS is 64 kms to 137 kms wide and 137 kms long. It receives several rivers including Vaigai from India and contains many islands of Sri Lanka.

Nodal Agency:
During 1997 Ministry of Surface Transport made Tuticorin Port Trust [TPT], which celebrated its Silver Jubilee on last 10-07-2004, as Nodal Agency for this project.

Socio-Economic aspects

(a) Government claim

  • Canal will help save 20 per cent of voyage time and increase trips by 20 per cent.
  • The channel will establish a continuous navigable sea route around peninsular coast within the Indian territorial waters, reduce shipping distance by about 254-424 nautical miles and voyage time of about 21-36 hrs as also the attendant operating costs
  • The project will provide employment opportunities and avenues of additional income through establishment of small ancillary industries. The project will also trigger development of coastal trade between the ports south and north of Rameswaram consequently reducing the load and congestion on railways and roadways.
  • Development of minor ports; spurt in export of marine products from the coastal districts; easy movement of coal to thermal power stations.
  • The project will help in saving considerable foreign exchange through reduction in oil import bill and generate revenue income from dues levied on ships transiting the channel, which will add to the national economy.
  • Average time saved per voyage will be 25 hours (average saving in distance 300 nautical miles and speed assumed as 12 knots). Average amount saved per voyage is Rs. 5.36 lakhs (2003)
  • According to the technical feasibility and economical analysis studies carried out by the Shipping Corporation of India, a savings of Rs 80.71 cr. per year is envisaged if the canal passage is free. However, the pilotage and other charges levied have not been taken into account.
  • The channel will be of very great importance from national defense and security point of view.  The revenue from naval and coastal traffic will go up adding to the direct benefit

(b) NGO and Expert contention

  • Revenue-wise the project will not be a profitable one. For example, as per Government of India, the 21-36-hour voyage time can be saved by SSCP. Here we have to look at the following limitations and constraints: a] Only 30 feet draft ships can be allowed to pass through SSCP. b] Ships have to reduce their speed to half, while sailing through SSCP.
  • The anticipated saving of 25 hours of voyage may not materialise as the travel would need more stoppings, comply with many formalities and speed limits. The ships will have to pay royalty. Besides these, traveling in the canal between October and December would not be safe owing to the weather conditions. The canal will not be for all seasons.
  • Practically speaking, a ship will take at least 20-24 hours to cross SSCP. There may not be any net saving in travel time.
  • Ships have to pay toll charges for crossing and a pilot boat with payment is needed to lead the vessel.
  • Former Tuticorin port officials say that hardly 2 or 3 ships would be crossing daily? What kind of revenue will this generate for the project to be viable?
  • There are 138 villages and towns spread in 5 districts through the coastal area from Gulf of Mannar to Palk Strait in Tamil Nadu State. The main livelihood activities of the fishermen residing in the villages adjoining to the coastal area are (i) fishing, (ii) seaweed collection, (iii) ‘chanks’ collection, (iv) coral mining, (v) fire wood collection and (vi) agriculture. If this project is implemented, socio-economic problem will multiply due to unemployment. This has not been factored in the NEERI report.

Environmental and other aspects

These have been dealt with in great detail in many reports, news stories and articles. Some of these however need highlighting. These are:
  • The hydrographic survey of Palk Bay and Palk strait area has been carried out by the National Hydrographic Office only for the period during January - February 2004. The Rapid EIA prepared by NEERI is insufficient and a comprehensive EIA should be conducted in all seasons for at least a year.
  • Sides of the canal cannot be lined or protected by any artificial wall; a strong tidal wave is enough to level the canal.
  • Canal could facilitate movement of fishes and other biota from the Bay of Bengal to the Indian Ocean and vice versa. By this way, the entry of oceanic and alien species into the Palk Bay and the Gulf of Mannar, as also the dispersal of endemic species outside the Palk Bay and the Gulf of Mannar could occur. This could be disastrous for the protected ecosystem GOM.
  • There will be a dredge of sea floor of 12.8 meter deep, 300 meter wide for 2-way traffic. If this happens to be sudden, tilt in the sea bed, may cause numerous violent process like a major change in drift, possible change in gravitational pull
  • Whole SSCP area is biologically rich and rated among the highly productive sea of the World. Project implementation may destruct coral reefs which, in turn, would tend to cause High sea tides, Surges, Hurricane, cyclone etc
  • Even though the NEERI reports deny the existence of archaeological structures under the seabed, these need to be investigated further. Otherwise, after the dredging, there is possibility of loosing the archeological treasures that may be lying beneath the sea.
  • The dangers posed by the project violate the UN Law of Sea Convention, 1982 that deal with Mouths of Rivers, Bays, Conservation of the living resources, Highly Migratory species, Marine Mammals, fishing rights protection, Marine Environment, Archaeological and historical objects.
  • Though the canal may be dug in Indian waters, the project will have significant impact on Sri Lanka. What kind of dialogue has been held with that country?
  • NEERI report suggests strict vigilance of crude oil tankers to avoid oil spill in the sea. No remedial measure suggested if oil spill does happen.
  • NEERI report suggests that a trained pilot or environmental watcher should be on board all the ships to watch marine mammals. This is impractical particularly during night or on rainy / dark cloudy days.
  • Consequent upon the opening up of the petroleum products large number of storage tanks would be set up on the East Coast. This could result in movement of hundreds of small/medium sized oil tankers in the Gulf of Mannar causing serious damage to the flora and fauna.


In short Sethu project in its present form is economically unviable, socially undesirable and environmentally unsustainable

TN govt. suspends beach mineral mining, orders probe

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A similar suspension of mining should be ordered in Andhra Pradesh which accounts for over 30% of the nation's monazite and other atomic mineral reserves. IREL was debarred from mining placer sands in Andhra Pradesh while IREL has been asked to hand over monazite to Toyota Tsoshu under the 'rare earths' agreement between India and Japan.

Kalyanaraman

Published: September 17, 2013 15:48 IST | Updated: September 17, 2013 15:49 IST

TN govt. suspends beach mineral mining, orders probe

PTI
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa
DIPRTamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa

Probe to look into alleged irregularities in 71 mineral quarries in the southern districts

Tamil Nadu government on Tuesday ordered a probe to ascertain if any irregularities have occurred in 71 large mineral quarries engaged in extraction of beach minerals in the state and suspended operations till its completion.
Chief Minister Jayalalithaa, following up on her action against allegations of illegal mining of beach minerals like garnet, Ilmenite and rutile in Tuticorin district, ordered a probe in large mineral quarries in Tirunelveli, Kanniyakumari, Madurai and Tiruchi districts.
“A policy decision on large mineral quarries would be taken after the receipt of the report on these quarries,” she said in a statement here.
A special team headed by Revenue Secretary Gagandeep Singh Bedi, which also included six sub-committees and comprising top officials from revenue, environment and forests besides geology and mining that went into charges of illegal beach sand mining in Tuticorin, would study the 71 quarries.
Earlier on Tuesday, Mr. Bedi submitted a report to Ms. Jayalalithaa on mining in Tuticorin district after field studies in August.http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/tamil-nadu/tn-govt-suspends-beach-mineral-mining-orders-probe/article5137903.ece?homepage=true&css=print

EVMs can be hacked in 7 minutes - Princeton Univ. Professor. ECI, scrap Indian EVMs.

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NJ court orders voting machine review

NEWARK — A state appeals court on Monday upheld New Jersey’s use of electronic voting machines, but the judges expressed serious concerns about possible human error and ordered further review of the state’s safeguards. They specifically cited a problematic election that occurred in Cumberland County.

Monday’s ruling, which upheld a lower court decision, is the latest in a legal battle dating back to 2004 when state Assemblyman Reed Gusciora and others sued over the state’s use of the machines. The lawsuit claimed the touch-screen systems, called direct recording electronic voting machines, were unreliable because they didn’t produce a paper backup and were susceptible to hacking.

Then-Gov. Jon Corzine signed legislation in 2005 that would have required all machines to be retrofitted with a paper backup system by January 2008, but that deadline wasn’t met and in 2009 lawmakers suspended it indefinitely over a lack of funding.

State Superior Court Judge Linda Feinberg upheld the use of the machines in 2010 and ordered a review, but stopped short of requiring that they produce a paper backup. During hearings on the issue, the plaintiffs presented evidence including a report by a Princeton University professor that claimed the machines could be hacked into in as little as seven minutes and altered to affect election results.
In Monday’s decision, the three-judge appellate panel sided with Feinberg’s opinion that the plaintiffs didn’t prove the machines violated voting rights and equal protection statutes

But the judges urged more study on whether the state has adequate safeguards to detect programming errors such as one that compromised an election in Cumberland County in 2011.

In that case, Cynthia and Ernest Zirkle, unsuccessful candidates for Democratic County Committee, complained that votes cast for them in Fairfield Township were mistakenly tallied for other candidates. An investigation revealed that a county employee had programmed the machines improperly; a new election was ordered, and the Zirkles won.

“We express deep concern as a result of the Zirkle litigation, not as to the fallibility of (electronic voting machines) relative to other voting devices, but rather as to the efforts made by the state to minimize the likelihood of error,” the judges wrote. “It is obvious that but for the very limited pool of voters involved in the Zirkle litigation, the human error that led to completely erroneous election results would never have been detected.”
http://www.thedailyjournal.com/viewart/20130917/NEWS01/309160030/NJ-court-orders-voting-machine-review

Muzaffarnagar. Riot for votes. Expose.

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Operation #RiotForVotes: Police officers reveal inside story of how 'political interference fuelled Muzaffarnagar riots'

Muzaffarnagar: #RiotForVotes
The Headlines Today Special Investigation - Operation #RiotForVotes - revealed how in a matter of days, naked communal insanity took over as politicos and top cops watched the macabre spectacle. The powers-that-be rolled the dice and the streets and chowks of Muzaffarnagar turned into their chessboard. What is Operation #RiotForVotes

Going undercover, the Headlines Today team spoke to UP Police officials responsible for handling Muzaffarnagar and the aftermath of the worst communal flare up in the area in a decade.

The men who report to Akhilesh revealed all. It is the biggest expose of an administration hell bent on doing the oposite of what it is entrusted with, all for a few more votes. 

MUST WATCH - Operation Riot For Votes: How the Akhilesh Govt is responsible for the Muzaffarnagar violence


Shockingly, this is what the cops had to say:

Location: Muzaffarnagar



Kalpana Saxena, SP, Crime: All sorts of things were said. There are a lot of things. We are in a lot of pressure right now. There's a lot of work. We'll talk in peace some day.
Headlines Today: But madam tell why was murder given a communal taint?
Kalpana Saxena, SP, Crime: What do I say? If I tell you in detail, then all this is very political. Muslims are thinking something. Hindus are thinking Muslims are being appeased. A lot of that is going on.

Followed by:

Satya Pratap Singh, Sho, Shahpur

Attacks on a particular community are increasing day by day, in that context, both police & administration are not taking proper action. We have to keep in mind what the govt wants & how we can save our job. Vote bank politics has ruined the country.

RS Bhagaur, SI, Fugna


Let me tell you one thing, the fact that I'm sitting in this police station is because I have said yes to what they wanted, otherwise I would have been suspended, sent home. I'm getting old, my kids will be troubled, where will I get food from?

WATCH MORE: It is true false FIRs have been filed, admits UP cop
 

R C Tripathi, SDM, Jansath




It's true that false FIRSs have been lodged. Even those who filed the FIR know this. 2 boys came & they were killed. Their parents were old. All these things were picked up by political groups, farmers' union took it up. Even before the police could do anything, it got caught up in law & order situation.


Samar Pal Singh, SHO, Bhopa

Actually there was another big mistake. DM & SSP shouldn't have gone to the meeting that was held in Khala Paar.



( Arun Singh, Harish Sharma and Deepak Sharma in Muzaffarnagar)

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/muzaffarnagar-headlines-today-sting-riots-for-votes/1/310298.html

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dn-ly5ULbAc

Sethu case: SC grants Swamy time to file response

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Published: September 18, 2013 01:34 IST | Updated: September 18, 2013 01:34 IST

Sethu case: SC grants Swamy time to file response

Legal Correspondent

The Bench posted the matter for further hearing in the second week of November

The Supreme Court on Tuesday granted time to BJP leader Subramanian Swamy to file his response to the Centre’s affidavit that it wanted to implement the Sethusamudram project in the original alignment by cutting across the Ram Setu.
A three-judge Bench, headed by Justice H.L. Dattu, posted the matter for further hearing in the second week of November when it would take up the petitions filed by Dr. Swamy and others challenging the project.
On Monday, the Centre stated that it did not accept the conclusions and recommendations of the Expert Committee headed by Dr. Pachauri that it was unlikely that public interest would be served if the project was implemented as per Alignment No. 4A (alternative route suggested by the court as against the original Alignment No. 6, which will cut through the Ram Setu.)
The Centre rejected the Tamil Nadu government’s stand that the Sethusamudram project must be scrapped “as the project is of questionable economic value and not in public interest.”
The Centre had said considering the fact that Rs. 766.82 crore had been spent on the project, implementing it further would improve its economic viability. It said “the project has strategic, navigational and socio-economic benefits and judging the economic viability of the project by merely internal rate of return which reflects only the commercial viability may not be appropriate.”

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/sethu-case-sc-grants-swamy-time-to-file-response/article5139018.ece?css=print

UPA builds a 'Sethu' for DMK return


CHENNAI: While a Congress-DMK alliance for the 2014 Lok Sabha election appears certain, the UPA government's submission in the Supreme Court on the Sethusamudram shipping canal project on Monday reiterates a growing proximity between the two parties. 


The Centre's sudden keenness to implement it along the controversial Ram Sethu alignment brings it into direct conflict with BJP. But, more significant is the fact that it gives DMK a face-saving excuse to renew ties with Congress, which it had snapped barely six months ago on the Tamil Eelam issue. Congress also believes that the Sethu project will boost its prospects in Tamil Nadu. 

"We have been putting pressure on the government to implement the project. It is a happy outcome," DMK spokesperson T K S Elangovan told TOI. The party leadership is practical enough to realise that the poll arithmetic would be better with the national party on its side. 

"The UPA government's stand on the Sethu project will help us explain to the people why the party is returning to Congress fold after the brief estrangement," said a DMK leader. 

Tamil Nadu Congress leaders point out that while the Centre's stand was bound to make DMK happy, the final verdict would be delivered by the Supreme Court. Dismissing any political motive behind the government's stand on the project in the court, TNCC president B S Gnanadesikan said, "The government will take a decision not based on political considerations, but on realities." 

The Centre submitted an affidavit in the Supreme Court stating that it intended to implement the Sethusamundram project without changing the original alignment that cuts across Adam's Bridge, considered the mythical Ram Setu. The affidavit stated the government did not accept the R K Pachauri committee's recommendations that the project was economically and ecologically unviable. It also rejected the Tamil Nadu government's stand that project should be scrapped on the ground that it was of "questionable economic value and not in the public interest". 

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had appointed the Pachauri committee after the Supreme Court asked the government to explore alternative alignments to avoid destruction of Adam's Bridge. Hindutva parties believe it is a natural heritage structure which must be preserved and can not be sacrificed for navigational advantage and easier movement of ships. 

The Pachauri committee report said the project would be an ecological disaster. It based its conclusion on factors like ocean currents and wind speeds. BJP national executive member L Ganesan said the project could be implemented without destroying or tampering with the Ram Sethu. 
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/UPA-builds-a-Sethu-for-DMK-return/articleshow/22674767.cms

Tamil Nadu probe into functioning of beach mineral mines

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Published: September 17, 2013 15:48 IST | Updated: September 18, 2013 03:23 IST

Jayalalithaa orders probe into functioning of beach mineral mines

PTI

Probe to look into alleged irregularities in 71 mineral quarries in the southern districts

Moments after receiving an enquiry report on alleged illicit mining of beach minerals in six lease areas of the Tuticorin district, Chief Minister Jayalalithaa on Tuesday ordered yet another probe into the functioning of garnet, ilmenite and rutile mines in 71 other such areas located in different parts of the State.
This time too, the probe team will be headed by Revenue Secretary Gagandeep Singh Bedi, who was in charge of the enquiry in Tuticorin.
The 71 other lease areas fall under Tirunelveli, Kanyakumari, Tiruchi and Madurai districts. Apart from coastal areas, beach minerals, also called major minerals, are found along certain river courses in the State.
This is why Tiruchi and Madurai, both interior regions, have been included.
Garnet is used as gemstones besides being employed for abrasives; ilmenite is the major source of titanium and rutile, a commercially important titanium mineral, is used in porcelain and glass manufacture.
A statement issued by the Chief Minister said that till the fresh enquiry was completed, the working of the mines would be suspended and transport permits would not be given. She asked officials to issue suitable orders in this regard.
On getting a report on the major minerals, the government would take a policy decision on mines of these minerals, she added.
The issue of alleged irregularities in mines of beach minerals came to the fore after former Tuticorin Collector Ashish Kumar conducted inspections at a private sand quarry early last month.
The Chief Minister subsequently constituted a probe team under the chairmanship of Mr Bedi and directed the team to submit its report in a month.
The team, comprising officials of Revenue, Environment and Forests, and Geology and Mines departments, carried out inspections in three phases, from August 12 to August 30.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/tamil-nadu/jayalalithaa-orders-probe-into-functioning-of-beach-mineral-mines/article5137903.ece?css=print

Stolen Yogini sculpture returns from Paris

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Published: September 18, 2013 04:40 IST | Updated: September 18, 2013 08:57 IST

Stolen Yogini sculpture returns from Paris

Special Correspondent
Vrishanana Yogini, an 1100-year-old sculpture stolen from Uttar Pradesh and shipped to Paris returns to India. Photo: Special Arrangement
Vrishanana Yogini, an 1100-year-old sculpture stolen from Uttar Pradesh and shipped to Paris returns to India. Photo: Special Arrangement

1,100-year-old statue was stolen from a village in Uttar Pradesh

A 1,100-year-old stone sculpture stolen many years ago from Lokhari, a remote village in Uttar Pradesh, and shipped to Paris has returned to India.
The National Museum in New Delhi is planning to celebrate the return of the idol and highlight the menace of illicit trafficking of India’s antiquities by holding an 18-day exhibition from September 19.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, the Ministry of External Affairs said Robert Schrimpf, a private art collector in Paris, had acquired the 400-kg stolen sculpture of Vrishanana Yogini, a goddess with a buffalo-shaped head. After his death, his wife Martine Schrimpf donated it to the Indian Embassy in Paris in 2008.
Though the sculpture was in the possession of the embassy for four years, it was only last year that efforts were made to bring it back to India. Indian officials had to establish that the idol was of Indian origin and its authenticity to get permission from the French authorities to ship it to India.
Indian Ambassador Arun Kumar Singh told The Hindu in a telephone interview that the return of the sculpture was “a lengthy and complicated process because permission had to be sought for the artefact to leave France. The French were very cooperative, and the idol has now returned to India and has safely been handed over to the National Museum.”
Given that many leading museums abroad still have yogini sculptures stolen from places like Kancheepuram, the return of Vrishanana Yogini is significant, said V. Venu, Director-General of the National Museum.
(With Inputs from Vaiju Naravane in Paris)
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/stolen-yogini-sculpture-returns-from-paris/article5139611.ece?homepage=true

Farooq Abdullah’s secular amnesia -- Arvind Lavakare

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Farooq Abdullah’s secular amnesia


September 16, 2013
Farooq Abdullah's secular amnesia
The Mumbai daily Free Press Journal dated September 9, 2013 reported that it was the opinion of Union Minister of New and Renewable Energy incumbent and former Chief Minister of Jammu & Kashmir, Farooq Abdullah that Narendra Modi as the Prime Minister will be dangerous and damaging for the Indian secular ethos. This is surely one of the most tragic-comic statements in Indian history. Yes, it is so, because, the 76-year-old Abdullah has either been totally affected by amnesia or deliberately chosen to hoodwink the people by overlooking the fact that his own State is not proclaimed as secular in its sacred Constitutional document.
Yes, the Preamble of the State Constitution of Jammu & Kashmir, promulgated by the State’s elected Constituent assembly on November 17, 1964 did not proclaim itself as a secular State and more importantly, the State Government did not accept the introduction of the word ‘secular’ in the State Constitution’s Preamble although it became applicable for the rest of India under Indira Gandhi’s 42nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1976. (This can be verified by looking up Appendix III of the Constitution of India, which details the scores of portions of the Constitution of India, which are not applicable to the J&K  because the Nehru-sponsored Article 370 of the Indian Constitution has given the State the right to refuse the applicability in its territory of any Parliamentary law falling outside the field of Defense, External Affairs and Communication.)
It is also revealing that unlike the rest of India, the J&K does not accord the ‘minority’ status to any portion of its population and, therefore, in a Muslim majority State, it denies benefits to the minorities as are handed out by the Government in New Delhi. What is particularly galling about Abdullah’s latest reference to India’s secular ethos is the fact that he himself is never known to have done anything at all to get J&K proclaimed as ‘secular’ despite being a dynastically lionesque figure in that State. He was the Chief Minister of the State between 1982-1984, 1986-1990, and 1996 to 2002. If he is touchingly enamoured of the ‘secular’ ethos, why, pray, did he not persuade his governments of the day to accept Indira Gandhi’s introduction of the word ‘secular’ in the State’s Constitution? Abdullah would not have an answer to that; else, so shrewd at dodging issues, he’ll divert the subject to a lecture on Kashmiriyat or on the urgent need to give pre-1953 autonomy to J&K.
Abdullah would also seem to have forgotten his role in those gruesome 100 days and more, beginning January 4, 1990, when two local Urdu newspapers in Jammu & Kashmir carried the Press release of Hizbul Mujahideen asking all Hindus to pack up and leave. In the following days, masked men run amok, waving Kalashnikovs, shooting to kill and shouting anti-India slogans. There was near chaos in the Kashmir as reports of killing of Hindus, invariably Kashmiri pandits begin to trickle in; there were explosions; inflammatory speeches were made from the pulpits of mosques, using public address systems meant for calling the faithful to prayers. A terrifying fear psychosis begins to take grip of Kashmiri pandits, the original inhabitants of the Kashmir with a recorded cultural and civilisational history dating back 5,000 years. The fear soon spread fast and far and wide.
And, what, pray, did today’s upholder of ‘secular ethos’ do at that time? Farooq Abdullah and his National Conference Government abdicating all responsibilities of the State. His pathetic, whimpering and snivelling Government had all but ceased to exist and had gone into hiding. When, on January 19, 1990, Jagmohan arrived to take charge as Governor of Jammu & Kashmir. Farooq Abdullah, resigned and went into a sulk.
That pogrom, that genocide. Is now part of Abdullah’s ‘secular’ amnesia, as he shamelessly takes pot shots at the BJP and Modi. But hypocrisy is but a part of Abdullah’s DNA, the arrogant Nawab, son of the ‘Tiger’ of Kashmir. Question him on how ludicrous the demand for autonomy is when, as per his own son’s admission (published in The Times of India on September 8, 2013, J&K’s annual total income is Rs 6,500 crores while the State’s annual liability on staff salaries is Rs 13,500 crores and on pensions is Rs 2,000 ctores respectively, has an annual income, which is way behind the salaries of the State forcing to be totally dependent on financial assistance from the Union Government. Mention that to the Nawab and he’ll probably talk of the State’s magnificent golf course, he could build in Srinagar. He will also probably add the promise Nehru made to his father, the Sheikh Sahab.
Question him on why he made a security guard put a shoe on his foot, and he’ll say the guard requested that favour, not failing to add that he put on the second shoe himself when a TV camera caught him doling that ‘favour’. Question him on how he could say in July this year that one can have a complete meal for one Rupee. And he will probably say, “Well, my people give me that!”
It’s only people like Farooq Abdullah and his Congress friends of unabashed appeasement who are the ones who are damaging and eroding the nation’s ‘secular ethos’, while the BJP and Narendra Modi are at best, the unproven villains of the game.
(Image source: iisd.ca)

Neta Nilekani is fine, but I still wouldn’t buy his Aadhaar -- R Jagannathan

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Neta Nilekani is fine, but I still wouldn’t buy his Aadhaar by R Jagannathan 43 mins ago Sept. 18, 2013 1:50 PM

The morning’s papers are awash with speculation about Nandan Nilekani, Chairman of the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), fighting the next Lok Sabha elections on a Congress ticket. Since there is no smoke without fire, one can assume that the speculation is reasonably founded in fact. Good luck to him in his career. However, there’s nothing surprising about it. Nilekani has been doing the UPA’s dirty work of shoving a quasi-illegal Aadhaar card down our throats in the name of empowering the poor. If an articulate and intelligent man like Nilekani can push such a major initiative without any law backing it and still survive the political challenges, he is surely half a politician already. Given the Congress’ good showing in Karnataka recently, Nilekani is probably home and dry even before the battle for votes begins. Let’s also not forget. Nilekani faced challenges from many parts of the government, from the Planning Commission, the finance ministry and the home ministry. If he still survived such a formidable challenge, surely he is cut out for politics. 

Nilekani is the chairman of the Aadhaar card project. Reuters Nilekani is the kind of guy I could have voted for, but I am not sure I would want to take his Aadhaar card. I prefer Neta Nilekani to Nilekani the UID vendor. Since the two are the same, I can’t ultimately vote for Nilekani either. Nobody should be under the illusion that Aadhaar is any kind of boon conferred on us by Nilekani. It is a Trojan horse gifted by a dysfunctional government which will ultimately compromise our security without even a figleaf of statutory protection for our privacy. It has been sold as a means to reach government benefits to the poor, but it could well end up as one more tool in the hands of the powerful to exclude some and extract speed money from the rest. There are many reasons why I don’t think Nilekani has done us a favour with Aadhaar. First, of course, is its questionable legality. There is no law which authorises anyone, even if the PM has told him to do so, to take the Indian citizen’s most prized possession – his identity, his biometrics, his fingerprints – and pretend he is doing him a favour. 

Morally and ethically, no one should do this without having a law guaranteeing adequate protection against misuse of the data collected. There is no such assurance to Indian citizens that their fingerprints will not fall in the wrong hands. Second, the idea of keeping an entire population’s biometric and personal details – every man, woman and child living in the territory of India, even if not a citizen – in huge databases is scary. Some 1,210 million people will stand exposed when UIDAI is completed. No country has ever done this for unstated purposes, though the US does so for social security, and has strong laws protecting people against misuse. If Hitler wanted a tool to control his people, he could not have asked for a better weapon than the UID database. Third, the scheme is being sold as a way to empower the poor who don’t have an identity but need government subsidies to survive. But it is being covertly pushed to the entire population. It is being pushed steadily by using the coercive power of the bureaucrat’s pen to make Aadhaar critical for all basic needs. If bank accounts, provident funds, mutual funds, gas connections, and almost any financial transaction by any citizen are going to need an Aadhaar number, this means the government has forced a unique ID on us indirectly without even legally being entitled to do so. If this is not a Trojan horse, what is? Fourth, today all kinds of private parties are being used to collect finger-prints and iris biometrics. If the collection of private data is in private hands at the start, what is to prevent this data from remaining in private hands illegally? Remember, at some point the idea is to use Aadhaar numbers to validate identity for financial transactions. But if my Aadhaar information is with a private party, will Nilekani guarantee that I cannot be impersonated? And if it does happen, who will protect me? The banks, which are being pressured to use Aadhaar numbers? Fifth, the real economic purpose of Aadhaar is to cut out fake and duplicate beneficiaries of government subsidies. 

This is a good reason to use the Aadhaar. However, in practice, this will increase bribery and corruption on an unimagined scale. Since no politician wants to lose any vote by specifically excluding the middle class or the non-poor from receiving subsidies, the chances are Aadhaar will be improperly used. To prevent exclusion from subsidies, everyone from gas dealers to power suppliers will seek bribes to ensure you continue to be subsidised. It is only a matter of time before politicians and middlemen figure out how to use Aadhaar to enrich themselves. Sixth, extortion will become easier. Once your income-tax numbers, bank accounts, credit card transactions, and asset purchases are linked through a common Aadhaar number, anyone in any part of a coercive tax system can blackmail you if your assets and financial details are leaked, you will be vulnerable. Remember, the whole 2G scam was unveiled when the Radia tapes were illegally leaked. 

Today, laws are in place to listen to every mobile conversation you make, every website you visit, and every transaction you conduct. Enter Aadhaar, and the ability of the establishment to connect all your conversations and transactions will magnify 10-fold. Do we want to be that vulnerable? Seventh, the collective wisdom of the parliamentary standing committee on finance clearly warned against the UIDAI. It vetted the UPA’s National Identification Authority of India Bill 2010 and recommended that it be trashed and replaced with something better. A report in India Today said the committee “strongly disapproved” of the “hasty manner” in which the scheme was being implemented, and pointed out that the data could be “misused”. (Nilekani, incidentally, is the man hastening Aadhaar. The report said: “The committee has questioned the technology used in Aadhaar.” It questioned the “technology as ‘unreliable and untested’. It has also cited the experience of foreign countries with similar schemes and said that many European nations withdrew their UID projects after opposition from the public.” This is not to say that Nilekani was brought in specifically to intrude into citizens’ privacy. Neither Manmohan Singh nor Nilekani could have had that thought in mind when they started out with Aadhaar. But during the course of the last five years it should have been obvious to Nilekani that the original purpose was going to be compromised in the minefield of politics. None of this also means that we don’t need an Aadhaar. There are, and can be, many legitimate uses for the Aadhaar number. 

But there is little doubt about its current dangers. Should Nilekani have gone ahead and still done the job without ensuring citizen safeguards and a legal backing? It is quite possible that Nilekani was sold a pup by the UPA. But should he have then sold the pup to us, in turn? He is already part of a messy political compromise where the integrity of the citizen’s privacy is now up in the air. Maybe he will fix the problem once he is elected and gets to take Aadhaar forward. But no one can bet on that anymore. I, for one, would not like to get myself an Aadhaar number.

http://www.firstpost.com/india/neta-nilekani-is-fine-but-i-still-wouldnt-buy-his-aadhaar-1116703.html

Illegalities in AirAsia-Tata airline clearance: Delhi HC admits Dr. Swamy's petition

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Court asks govt to reply on AirAsia-Tata airline within 4 weeks

Delhi HC admits Subramanian Swamy’s petition seeking to quash AirAsia India clearance to start an airline
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First Published: Wed, Sep 18 2013. 01 28 PM IST
Foreign investments in airlines were meant to be allowed for existing airlines and not start-ups such as AirAsia India, says Subaramanian Swamy. Photo: AFP
Foreign investments in airlines were meant to be allowed for existing airlines and not start-ups such as AirAsia India, says Subaramanian Swamy. Photo: AFP

New Delhi: The Delhi high court on Wednesday admitted a petition by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Subramanian Swamy seeking the quashing of the clearance granted to AirAsia India Pvt. Ltd to start an airline, saying the government had overlooked several issues related to foreign control and policy in granting it.
The court has given the government four weeks to respond to the petition.
“It’s a illegal project. Not only I want the court to quash it but also the officers who passed it in FIPB (Foreign Investment Promotion Board), overruling ministry of aviation—they should be prosecuted under the corruption act,” Swamy said in an interview after the case was admitted in court.
AirAsia India is a new airline company in which Malaysia’s AirAsia Bhd has a 49% stake, Tata Sons has 30%, and Arun Bhatia’s Telestra Tradeplace Pvt. Ltd owns the rest.
Swamy said foreign investments in airlines were meant to be allowed for existing airlines and not start-ups such as AirAsia India. “They have no business to be there. In four weeks, all the four respondents must file why they kept quiet on this illegality.”
The four respondents are AirAsia, Indian finance ministry, aviation ministry and commerce ministry.
Swamy’s previous allegations against the government on alleged irregularities in the allotment of spectrum to telcos and in the deal between Jet Airways (India) Ltd and Etihad Airways PJSC have blown up into controversies that continue to embarrass the ruling Congress party.
In the AirAsia case, Swamy says the government’s clearance to AirAsia India is in violation of a September policy that allowed foreign airlines to invest in Indian airlines.
At the time, this was interpreted to mean that the investment would be in existing Indian airlines, which later was clarified by some arms of the government to include both existing and new airlines.
In the petition, Swamy has asked the court to prohibit the government “from taking any action contrary to the applicable FDI (foreign direct investment) policy as per Press Note No. 6 of 2012 read with DGCA Guidelines dated 01.03.2013 or from granting any approval for foreign investment by a foreign airlines in a greenfield airline project”.
In any investment in an Indian airline by a foreign carrier, control has to remain with Indian nationals, Swamy said.
In AirAsia’s case, however, the Indian owners Tata and Telestra are bound by clauses in their agreements that would leave control with Malaysia’s AirAsia, he said.
“Malaysia was ‘silent’ in respect of details that were otherwise mandatorily required to be examined and considered by the approving authority,” he said, referring to the agreement presented by AirAsia India to FIPB.
Swamy said it was “amply clear from the construct of the shareholder’s arrangements” that while the majority shareholding of 51% is divided between Tata Sons and Telestra, the effective control lies with the foreign investor.
http://www.livemint.com/Companies/zU0HJbrF0XOByLJYto56tN/Court-asks-govt-to-reply-on-AirAsiaTata-airline-within-4-we.html

Indian netas part of ISI's fake note racket: IM

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INDIAN NETAS PART OF ISI’S FAKE NOTE RACKET: IM

Tuesday, 17 September 2013 | Rakesh K Singh | New Delhi
Startling revelations, that could hit the penetration of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in the political class of India and Nepal, have been made by Indian Mujahideen (IM) mastermind Yasin Bhatkal.
The militant has revealed the presence of about 200 major Fake Indian Currency Notes (FICN) dealers along the Indo-Nepal border, including politicians from either side. The IM co-founder has disclosed that as many as ten undercover officials of ISI operate a flourishing FICN ‘business’ out of Kathmandu.
These undercover ISI operatives, comprising senior officials of Pakistan Army (colonel and major rank) are not part of the diplomatic staff and stay outside the Embassy or related premises. The ISI-run FICN nodes in Nepal are active in Birganj, Pokhara, Viratnagar and Gaur, the IM mastermind told the interrogators. 
Bhatkal also told interrogators about the presence of two dozen IM operatives who have been trained y the ISI to carry out the jehadi agenda from Nepal to target India.
The ISI has also established links with Nepalese Maoists to further their ties with Naxals in India and intensify attacks here and bring newer areas under the ambit of ultra-Left extremism.
Bhatkal has also revealed that the ISI is exploring ways to supply weapons and explosives to Naxal groups through the Nepalese Maoists.Besides this, Pakistan’s notorious agency is said to be supporting the anti-talk faction of ULFA, with funds, weapons and training at a facility in Bangladesh.
While funding to Indian terror and insurgent groups is channeled through the hawala network, weapons are routed from Bangladesh via the North-East. In the recent past, Naxal activities have been reported from Assam, Tripura and Meghalaya. 
Bhatkal has already divulged ISI’s funding to certain groups to revive Sikh militancy. FICN is a widely prevalent mode of terror financing, a primary mechanism for destabilizing the country, economically as well as by undermining the faith of the common man in its ‘legal tender’, an Intelligence official said.
The networks in place for the movement of FICN as well as hawala are estimated to be highly evolved and are suspected to lend themselves as infrastructure for gunrunning, transportation of explosives, provision of hideouts and communication channels for terrorists. The revelations by Bhatkal have given security agencies major insights into the FICN circulation channels and linkages with terror financing, sources in the NIA and IB said.
The sources said movement of FICN is channeled through various indirect routes from several countries and by different modes of transport. Nepal has become a major hub of FICN movement with UAE and Malaysia being two other nations used by the ISI as third country bases for movement of FICN. Organised crime networks like the so called D-Company of Dawood Ibrahim is also a big player in the evolved FICN distribution chain.
“The extensive and well-structured network of Dawood, using proxies, has made monitoring and detection extremely difficult for the security agencies. The revelations by Bhatkal could reveal the layered structures of the illegal trade in fake currency, its quantum and penetration of D-Company in India’s neighbourhood, especially Nepal,” the sources added. The proceeds of FICN trade by Dawood are estimated to have made inroads into the economic framework of the country through diverse activities, such as the infotainment sector, sand-mining in coastal areas, extortion racket, and smuggling of narcotics and gambling in sports activities. Parts of the funds are also pumped into terrorist activities, officials added.
 
http://www.dailypioneer.com/todays-newspaper/indian-netas-part-of-isis-fake-note-racket-im.html

Indo-US nuke pact. SoniaG UPA, don't destroy India's indigenous competence in building thorium-based reactors. Protect India's thorium reserves.

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Updated: September 19, 2013 08:22 IST

Manmohan may carry nuclear liability dilution as gift for U.S. companies

    SANDEEP DIKSHIT

    J. VENKATESAN
PTIThe Manmohan Singh government is looking to use the opinion of the Attorney- General to effectively neutralise a key provision of India’s nuclear liability law.
It is for operator to exercise ‘right of recourse’ under section 17 of Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act
Under sustained pressure from the Obama administration, the Manmohan Singh government is looking to use the opinion of the Attorney- General to effectively neutralise a key provision of India’s nuclear liability law that would hold American reactor suppliers liable in the event of an accident caused by faulty or defective equipment.

In an opinion to the Department of Atomic Energy, which referred the matter to him on September 4, Goolam Vahanvati has said it is for the operator of a nuclear plant in India to decide whether it wished to exercise the ‘right of recourse’ provided to it by section 17 of the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act.

The AG’s opinion effectively paves the way for the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd, which will operate any nuclear plant using imported reactors, to repudiate a right that Parliament explicitly wrote into section 17(b) of the law to ensure that foreign suppliers don’t get away scot-free if a nuclear accident is traced back to “equipment or material with patent or latent defects or sub standard services.”

American nuclear vendors Westinghouse and GE have lobbied hard with Washington and Delhi to have this provision amended or removed. Though India has publicly stuck to the line that dilution of this provision is not possible, Mr. Vahanvati’s view opens a door for the government to accommodate the U.S. demand when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh meets President Barack Obama on September 27.
Reiterating the opinion he gave to the government in October 2012 in the context of the Inter-Governmental Agreement between India and Russia, Mr Vahanvati noted, “Section 17(a) provides for recourse if such right is expressly provided for in a contract in writing. If the operator chooses not to incorporate such a provision in the contract, it would be open for him to do so.”

In its reference to the AG, the DAE had sought confirmation “regarding the presumption that the existing provisions of section 17 of the Act facilitate the operator either to exercise his ‘right of recourse’ by incorporating a clause in the contract or to waive his right or to limit the liability on the part of the supplier.”

The AG endorsed the view expressed by the Ministry of External Affairs in an internal note that “a right was given to the operator to have recourse against the supplier but there was no mandatory obligation or requirement for the operator to do so and that the operator could choose not to exercise that right.”

The AG’s view is likely to be challenged by the opposition, since section 17 grants the operator the right of recourse under one of three conditions: (a) if the right is expressly provided for in writing; (b) if the accident is caused by faulty material or equipment provided by the supplier; or (c) the accident results from an act of commission or omission of an individual done with intent to cause nuclear damage.

Since 17(b) suggests Parliament intended to hold suppliers responsible even if there is no contractual liability, it is not clear how a public sector undertaking like NPCIL, which is answerable to Parliament, could give its suppliers a free pass.

In 2008, India had promised American companies 10,000 MWe worth of contracts for setting up nuclear power plants in return for the U.S. administration helping to end the country’s nuclear isolation.

Now, five years later, NPCIL and Westinghouse are set to sign an agreement that in theory will give the American company the go ahead to begin work on its proposed nuclear power park in Mithi Virdi, Gujarat.

Keen to improve the ‘atmospherics’ around the signing of the pact, likely to be on the day Dr. Singh and Mr. Obama meet at the White House, the government is asking NPCIL to announce $100-175 million as the first token payment for the Gujarat reactor.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/manmohan-may-carry-nuclear-liability-dilution-as-gift-for-us-companies/article5142882.ece

Published: September 19, 2013 16:38 IST | Updated: September 19, 2013 17:09 IST

Don’t succumb to U.S. pressure, Left tells Centre

PTI

"Attempt to dilute the Civil Nuclear Liability Act to exempt US suppliers of reactors from the liability clause will be an illegal attempt to bypass the law passed by Parliament", says Prakash Karat

The Left parties on Thursday warned the government that it would commit an “illegal act” if it tried to dilute the Civil Nuclear Liability Act or signed any agreement for supply of nuclear reactors during the upcoming US visit of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
“If the government wants to succumb to US pressures (to clinch a deal), I am afraid they will be shown as having done an illegal act which will be against the interests of the country,” CPI (M) general secretary Prakash Karat told reporters here.
“The effort of the Manmohan Singh government to dilute the Civil Nuclear Liability Act to exempt US suppliers of reactors from the liability clause will be an illegal attempt to bypass the law passed by Parliament,” he said, adding, “The Americans want to sell the reactors on their terms but they will have to abide by the laws of this country...”
Mr. Karat was reacting to reports that government was moving to clear a deal to acquire nuclear reactors from US major Westinghouse Corp and sign an agreement during Singh’s visit.
Asserting that no one could bypass the law laid down by Parliament — the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act 2010 — Mr. Karat said, “We know they (Government) tried to dilute the law but the Standing Committee rejected it.”
“It is evident that the UPA government is succumbing to the pressure of the US administration to safeguard their companies’ interests. But this cannot be at the expense of the interests of the country and the safety and security of Indian citizens,” the CPI (M) Polit Bureau later said in a statement.
CPI national secretary D Raja accused the government of becoming “a real suspect” on the nuclear deal and liability issues, saying, “The government is consciously going ahead to satisfy the US and dilute the laid-down law and now that has been exposed.”
Maintaining that the opinion of the Attorney General on the matter was “an interpretation of the law which does not hold”, Mr. Karat referred to Section 17 of the Nuclear Liability Act and said, “Irrespective of the written contract, the right to recourse and the liability of the supplier will apply if there is supply of faulty material or equipment.”
The section deals with right to legal recourse against the supplier or the manufacturer in case of a nuclear accident, faulty equipment or wilful neglect.
In his reaction, Mr. Raja sought a clarification from the Prime Minister on the issue, saying “he took the risk of Left support withdrawal” to sign the Indo-US nuclear deal.
The CPI leader said linking the accord with Russia on the Kudankulam nuclear power plant with the proposed deal with the US firm Westinghouse “is itself a manipulative move as the Kudankulam deal was struck much before the Liability Act was passed by Parliament.”
Demanding stoppage of any move towards an agreement with the US firm, Mr. Raja said the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited “cannot enter into any agreement bypassing the law passed by Parliament.”
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/dont-succumb-to-us-pressure-left-tells-centre/article5145919.ece?ref=relatedNews

Bypassing India's interests to please US? -- Kumar Chellappan

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BYPASSING INDIA’S INTERESTS TO PLEASE US?

Friday, 20 September 2013 | Kumar Chellappan | CHENNAI
The move by the Manmohan Singh Government to dilute the provisions of the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act 2010 by incorporating the suggestions of the Attorney-General has upset top nuclear scientists and former members of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC).
The Civil Liability of Nuclear Damage Act was enacted by both Houses of Parliament in August 2010 with the purpose of holding the supplier of the equipment responsible for any mishaps resulting out of the malfunctioning of imported nuclear reactors and for ensuring prompt compensation to the victims of the nuclear accident.
Since the US nuclear industry was not happy with the stringent provisions in the Act, the US Government has been putting pressure on India to water down the Act to suit the convenience of that country’s industry, which wants to tap the trillions of dollars worth of nuclear energy market in India.
Attorney-General of India GE Vahanvati in a note to the Department of Atomic Energy, which referred the matter to him on September 4, has advised that it is for the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd (NPCIL), which is the sole operator of nuclear reactors in the country to decide whether to exercise the right of recourse provided by Section 17 of the Act which enables it to claim compensation in the event of a nuclear disaster.
According to the note submitted by the AG, the NPCIL could do away with the right to claim compensation from the manufacturer/supplier of the equipment in the event of a nuclear accident. The AG’s note comes at a time when US companies like Westinghouse and General Electric are trying to hard sell their nuclear reactors to India, much against the wishes of Indian nuclear engineers and scientists.
The Government has already diluted the powers of NPCIL by packing it with hangers on and acolytes, pointed out nuclear scientists working in BARC and the IGCAR.
Top nuclear scientists including former members of the Atomic Energy Commission described the AG’s note as an attempt to surrender the nuclear sovereignty of India at the feet of the US Government by diluting the provisions of the Civil Liability of Nuclear Damage Act passed in Parliament. “Efforts to water down the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act is with an eye to hand over the entire nuclear industry of the country to the control of the United States of America,” AN Prasad, former member, AEC, told The Pioneer.
The Act was necessitated for operationalising the India-US civil nuclear deal of 2008 which helped India getting trading status with the Nuclear Suppliers Group enabling it to import nuclear reactors and fuel from the members of the NSG.
The US manufacturers of nuclear reactors too insisted that India should enact the civil liability Act so that they could claim insurance in their country in the event of any accidents involving the reactors supplied by them.
The Act ran into a controversy following the UPA Government’s decision to cap the maximum compensation it could claim from the foreign manufacturers to Rs 1,500 crores.
The US Government was insisting on behalf of the nuclear industry in that country to amend the Civil Liability of Nuclear Damage Act to free them  from paying any compensation to the victims of any nuclear mishap in India resulting out of the equipment supplied by them.
 “They want a safeguard in the Act which would absolve the US equipment suppliers of any kind of liability in the eventuality of an accident. It was the absence of such a safeguard and Act which helped Union Carbide to go scot-free though the 1984 leak in its Bhopal unit killed more than 20,000 people,” said a senior scientist in Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Trombay, near Mumbai.   
He pointed out that the 1,000 MW nuclear reactor at Koodankulam has been built on the condition that the supplier, Russia, need not pay any compensation to India in the eventuality of an accident.
“The Americans, French and the Japanese are asking for the same liberal terms,” said the scientist who did not want his name to be quoted.   
Prasad, who is also the former director of the elite Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Trombay, near Mumbai, said the India-USA Civil Nuclear Deal itself was detrimental to the interests of India.
“Though the deal was signed in 2008, the Indian nuclear industry stays where it was prior to 2008. Not a single megawatt of nuclear power has been generated additionally during the last six years. We have to be content with the 20 nuclear reactors spread across the country contributing 4,000 MW of electric power,” he said.
Prominent nuclear scientists pointed out that the once powerful Atomic Energy Commission, Atomic Energy Regulatory Board and the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Ltd (which operates Indian nuclear reactors) have been jam-packed with stooges. 
However, A Gopalakrishnan, former chairman, Atomic Energy Regulatory Board was of the view that there is no way for the Government other than sticking to the law enacted by Parliament.
“If they want to make any changes in the Civil Liability of Nuclear Damage Act, they have to get the permission of Parliament. They cannot bypass Parliament like that,” said A Gopalakrishnan.
A serving nuclear scientist too pointed out that the Nuclear Liability Law is an Act passed by the Indian Parliament and the Government has no way other than following the law in letter and spirit.
 “However, the nuclear suppliers are not happy with the provisions in the Bill, which make them liable to pay compensation in the eventuality of an accident. They are lobbying with the Indian Government to amend the law so that they could sell their reactors to India,’ said Prasad.
He pointed out that Manmohan Singh was not at all enthusiastic about getting the Civil Liability of Nuclear Damage Act passed in Parliament since the onus would be on the suppliers in the eventuality of nuclear accidents.
“In 2008, the then chairman of AEC Anil Kakodkar declared that the country would set up 600 nuclear reactors with total capacity of 1,200 GW by 2040. It is humanly impossible to set up 600 reactors in a country like India in 30 years,” said Prasad.
http://www.dailypioneer.com/todays-newspaper/bypassing-indias-interests-to-please-us.html

SoniaG UPA bid for unviable nuclear contract. Illegal DAE notification allowing OGL for atomic minerals

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DAE, cancel and withdraw an illegal notification issued in January 2006.

DAE notification S.O. 61(E) of 18 January 2006, gazetted on 20 Jan. 2006 which revised the list of Prescribed substances, Prescribed equipment and Technology IS ILLEGAL.

Parliament has not approved the changes proposed in the list of Atomic Minerals in First Schedule of the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957.

It was illegal to have issued and gazetted the DAE notification of 2006 WITHOUT FIRST ensuring approval of the Parliament to the proposed changes of the prescribed substances 
in Atomic Minerals under the Act.

DAE should IMMEDIATELY notify cancellation and withdrawal of the notification and prosecute action against those who have acted in contravention of the Rule of Law enunciated in the Act.
VP Raja, Addl. Secy, DAE letter of 2 Feb. 2006 to RK Sharma, Secy. General, Federation of Indian Mineral Industries
Section 2.1: Notification by the Government of India, Department of Atomic Energy, published in the Gazette of India (extraordinary, Part II, Section 3, sub-section (ii), dated 20th January, 2006).
The notification is illegal because the Act No. 67 of 1957 was NOT amended moving the selected list of Atomic Minerals in Part B of First Schedule of the Act to Open General Licence list, as Part C. Titanium bearing minerals and ores (ilmenite, rutile and leucoxene) continue to be listed as Atomic Minerals in part B of the First Schedule of Act No. 67 of 1957. See the Act No. 67 of 1957 (as amended upto 10th may 2012) at: http://mines.nic.in/writereaddata/Filelinks/e342d686_MMDR%20Act%201957.pdf issued by Controller-General, Indian Bureau of Mines, Nagpur, August 2012
Section 2: VP Raja, Addl. Secy, DAE letter of 2 Feb. 2006 to RK Sharma, Secy. General, Federation of Indian Mineral Industries

V.P. Raja, Additional Secretary, Govt. of India, Dept. of Atomic Energy, Anushakti Bhavan, Chhatrapti Shivaji Maharaj Marg, Mumbai 400001

2 Feb. 2006

D.O. No. 7/3(4)/2005-PSU/21

Dear Shri Sharma,
The Departmet of Atomic Energy vide its Notification S.O. 61(E) dated 18th January 2006, which has been gazette on 20th January 2006 has revised the list of Prescribed Substanes, Prescribed Equipment and Technology. This superseded the earlier notifications of the Department on the same subject dated 15th March 1995. A copy of the new notification is enclosed herewith.

Your attention I particular is drawn to Items 0A314 and 0A315 and the note thereunder.

Since this notification will have an impact on industries engaged in beach sand mining, you are kindly requested to bring this to the notice of all your members.

Ilmenite, Rutile, Leucoxene and Zircon will no longer be Prescribed Substances under the Atomic Energy Act with effect from 1st January 2007. Ilmenite, Rutile and Leucoxene will also get shifted from Part ‘B’ of the First Schedule to the Mines and Minerals (Development & Regulation) Act 1957 to Part ‘C’ of the same Schedule. This change will become effective only after suitable amendments are carried out to the Mines and Minerals (Development & Regulations) Act and passed by Parliament. However, Zirconium bearing minerals and ores including zircon will continue to be Atomic Minerals under Part ‘B’ of the First Schedule.

This is being brought to your notice as required under Section 4(2) of Right to Information Act, 2005.

With warm regards,
Yours sincerely,
Sd. V.P. Raja
Encl. As above.
Shri RK Sharma,
Secretary General, Federation of Indian Mineral Industries, 301, Bakshi House, 40-41, Nehru Place, New Delhi 110019

Tel. 022 22028328. Fax 022 22048476/22026726. Gram: ATOMERG email:raja@dae.gov.in

Illegal notification of 18 Jan. 2006 on Atomic Minerals and loot of Rs. 96,120 Crores worth Atomic Minerals - Complaints 
On Thu, May 2, 2013 at 4:34 PM, S. Kalyanaraman <kalyan97@gmail.com> wrote:
MINES AND MINERALS

(DEVELOPMENT AND REGULATION) ACT, 1957

(No. 67 of 1957)

(As ammended up to 20th December, 1999)

[THE FIRST SCHEDULE

[See sections 4(3), 5(1), 7(2) and 8(2)]

SPECIFIED MINERALS

PART A. Hydro Carbons Energy Minerals

Coal and Lignite.
PART B. Atomic Minerals


Beryl and other beryllium-bearing minerals.
Lithium-bearing minerals.
Minerals of the "rare earths" group containing Uranium and Thorium.
Niobium-bearing minerals.
Phosphorites and other phosphatic ores containing Uranium.
Pitchblende and other Uranium ores.
[Titanium bearing minerals and ores (ilmenite, rutile and leucoxene)].
Tantallium-bearing minerals.
Uraniferous allanite, monazite and other thorium minerals.
Uranium bearing tailings left over from ores after extraction of copper and gold, ilmenite and other titanium ores.
[Zirconium bearing minerals and ores including Zircon].
PART C. Metallic and Non-Metallic Minerals

Asbestos.
Bauxite.
Chrome ore.
Copper ore.
Gold.
Iron ore.
Lead.
[ ]
Manganese ore.
Precious stones.
Zinc.]

MINES AND MINERALS

(DEVELOPMENT AND REGULATION) ACT, 1957

(No. 67 of 1957)

(As ammended up to 20th December, 1999)


List Of Amending Act

An Act to provide for the regulation of mines and the development of minerals under the control of the Union.BE it enacted by Parliament in the Eighth Year of the Republic of India as follows:

Preliminary (Section 1 - 3)
General Restrictions On Undertaking Reconnaissance, Prospecting And Mining Operations (Section 4 - 9A)
Procedure For Obtaining Reconnaissance Permits, Prospecting Licences Or Mining Leases in Respect of Land in Which the Minerals Vest in the Government (Section 10 - 12)
Rules For Regulating The Grant of Reconnaissance Permits, Prospecting Licences And Mining Leases (Section 13 - 16)
Special Powers of Central Government to undertake Reconnaissance, Prospecting or Mining Operations in Certain Cases (Section 17 - 17A)
Development of Minerals (Section 18 - 18A)
Miscellaneous (Section 19 - 33)
The First Schedule - Specified Minerals
The Second Schedule - Rates Of Royalty
The Third Schedule - Rates of Dead Rent

http://idsa.in/askanexpert/Whynuclearliabilityrulesultravires The Rules are ultravires of the Act and can be challenged IMMEDIATELY.

From The HIndu, 2011
"Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's statement following his meeting with President Obama in Bali, that any concerns the United States may have regarding India's nuclear liability regime would have to be resolved “within the four corners of the law” and in accordance with “the law of the land” was timely and assertive. It signalled that India would not be cowered into making legislative amendments to satisfy the demands of American nuclear suppliers, specifically regarding the controversial Section 17 of the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act, 2010 (“Act”), dealing with the right of recourse. However, the statements were also slightly disingenuous, since beneath this strident posturing lay a much more accommodating and pliable policy position, best exemplified by Rule 24 on the right of recourse in the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Rules, 2011 (“Rules”), notified only a matter of days prior to the meeting. Not only does this rule fundamentally alter “the four corners of the law” that the Prime Minister referred to, it does so in a manner that ingeniously seeks to negate the effective will of Parliament, expressed in the Act passed last year with a large majority. In light of this significant impact that Rule 24 has, its exact terms need to be scrutinised carefully."

UPA bid for unviable nuclear contract revealed

Published: 20th September 2013 08:45 AM
Last Updated: 20th September 2013 08:46 AM
The UPA government is courting a nuclear scandal as it plans to sign a preliminary contract with US-based nuclear reactor building company Westinghouse ahead of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s meeting with US President Barack Obama on September 27. A note for the Cabinet Committee on Security accessed by Express reveals the government is pushing for a preliminary contract betwee­n Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited and Westinghouse Electric Company, without doing a complete viability analysis of the project to set up 6X1000 MW nuclear power reactors at Chayya-Mithivirdi in Gujarat.
The note pointed out that the authorities wanted to seek the approval of the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) first instead of going through the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) to ink the deal in alleged violation of established norms.
“It is proposed to sign the preliminary contract prior to the visit of the Prime Minister to USA in end September 2013. Given the paucity of time, approval of the Atomic Energy Commission cannot be taken, instead approval of CCS is being solicited directly,” the CCS note said.
Further, to justify bypassing of the AEC, the note argued that “none of the work packages in the preliminary contract deal with actual nuclear activities”. The preliminary contract will cost about Rs 102 crore to the government exchequer. NPCIL and Westinghouse Electric Company had signed a Memorandum of Understanding in 2012 under the Indo-US Civil Nuclear Deal, which included negotiation of an Early Works Agreement for installation of nuclear reactors.
The CCS note suggested that the cost of the preliminary contract would be subsumed in the equity support from government if the main project is being taken up in collaboration with Westinghouse Electric Company. But, in case the Westinghouse collaboration is limited to a preliminary contract, the government will bear the entire cost.
The Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), headed by the Prime Minister, strongly denied dilution of key provisions of India’s nuclear law arguing that the proposed contract with Westinghouse is for a limited range of pre-project services only.
Although the CCS note clearly states that due to paucity of time they could not seek approval of the Atomic Energy Commission, the DAE in a statement issued on Thursday said the NPCIL would enter into this preliminary contract only with the approval of AEC and the Government of India.
“This contract, if approved, will not bind NPCIL to enter into a contract with Westinghouse for the supply of reactors without establishing safety and techno-commercial viability. The contracts, which will have to be approved by the competent authority of the Government, will be fully consistent with Indian law. There is no question of Indian law being violated or diluted. The projects will have to meet the highest standards of safety,” a DAE statement said.

http://newindianexpress.com/nation/UPA-bid-for-unviable-nuclear-contract-revealed/2013/09/20/article1793375.ece

http://intellibriefs.blogspot.in/2006/07/sethna-prefers-npt-to-indo-us-nuclear.html

JULY 06, 2006


Sethna prefers NPT to Indo-US nuclear deal

Sethna prefers NPT to Indo-US nuclear deal

MUMBAI: India would be better off signing the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), which permits the exit of any signatory nation, rather than the nuclear deal with the US that will bind the country for 'perpetuity', top nuclear scientist Homi Sethna has said.

“NPT may be discriminatory, but we will still be allowed to exit whereas in the current Indo-US deal which is under negotiation, India will remain bound in perpetuity,” Sethna said while delivering a key note address at the Forum of Integrated National Security (FINS) here on Saturday evening.

"Therefore, I prefer NPT...to signing the current deal (with the US)," said Sethna, former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission that has been linked to the country's civil and military nuclear programmes.

"India is supposed to get only uranium for its nuclear programme to expand. Simply for this, so much compromising... is uncalled for," he said.

"The Americans were out of the nuclear power reactor building business for the last 25 years. So where is the question of (getting) technology from them?" asked the octogenarian scientist credited with playing a key role in the 1974 nuclear blast that saw India's emergence as a nuclear weapons power.

“Therefore, (in order to end the current global sanctions on the nuclear programme), we rather sign the NPT and it will give an escape route from going through all this trauma of separation and getting a special status agreement with IAEA (under the additional protocol),"he said.

"I do not know how we have been tied down to this situation," Sethna said.

"The Indian government should now seriously think about it (signing the NPT). Instead of being looked down upon as a non-signatory all the time, go ahead and sign and break it immediately may be within three hours," he said.

Asked whether it would be unethical on India's part to sign a deal with the US, he denied that this was the case, pointing to India's need for energy security.

Concluding a treaty with the US is a most difficult task, said Sethna, who has experience of dealings with the Americans during the 196Os and after the nuclear test in 1974.

"We had experience with them earlier. I am not saying Americans are not reliable. I want to say, they have a system which makes them feel that they are superior and want to dictate terms," he said to applause from a gathering that included scientists and security analysts.

Sethna said former prime minister Indira Gandhi had given oral instructions to go ahead with building a nuclear device after he informed her about China's progress in developing atomic weapons.

Speaking on the occasion, Former AEC chairman P K Iyengar also referred to the Indo-US nuclear deal and said the testimonies before the US Congress and the additions recommended by US Congressional panels to President George Bush's proposal have come as a "shock" to those who follow the intricacies of the nuclear deal.
End of The Indo-US nuclear Deal?
By: Dr.Dipak Basu 
May 06, 2007
Views expressed here are author’s own and not of this website. Full disclaimer is at the bottom.

  Feedback

(The author is a Professor in International Economics in Nagasaki University, Japan)Related articlesIndia Russia Nuclear issue: Indian media is silent about it Dr.Dipak Basu
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Has America Gained Control of Their Nuclear Weapons? Hari SudWe should pray that US would withdraw the Indo-US nuclear deal under pressure from the Democratic Party. It will be a blessing in disguise. The nuclear deal has little to do with the nuclear power generations but it aims at the elimination of India’s ability to produce any nuclear weapons. Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT), which India has refused to sign so far, is about to be imposed upon India through a back door with devastating consequences for India’s immediate future.

Dr Homi Sethna, former chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission and one of the founding-father of India’s nuclear program, said that what Dr Manmohan Singh was about to sign was worse than joining the NPT regime. Dr A. Gopalakrishnan, former chairman of the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board, has outlined how precisely commitments made by Dr Singh to Parliament and the people have been blatantly undermined and notes that if the deal goes through in its present form, it will "compromise the sovereignty of this country for decades to come". He has exposed the very enormous financial price that India will have to pay as well, between Rs 300,000 to Rs 400,000 crores in nuclear reactors that will be totally dependent for their existence on a yearly audit of our policies by the US Congress. Dr P.K. Iyengar, another former chairman of the AEC, has called the deal "giving up sovereignty".

History of Development:
India decided on a three-stage nuclear program back in the 1950s, when India's nuclear power generation program was set up. In the first stage, natural uranium (U-238) was used in pressurized heavy water reactors (PHWRs). In the second stage, the plutonium extracted through reprocessing from the used fuel of the PHWRs was scheduled to be used to run fast-breeder reactors (FBRs) built by the Soviet Union and Russia in India.

“The plutonium was used in the FBRs in 70% mixed oxide (MOX)-fuel, to breed uranium-233 in a thorium-232 blanket around the core. In the final stage, the FBRs use thorium-232 and produce uranium-233 for use in the third stage reactors.” (See Ramtanu Maitra, "Thorium: Preferred Nuclear Fuel of the Future," Executive Intelligence Review, Nov. 18, 2005.)

The reason for India's commitment to switch over to thorium, is its large estimated thorium reserves of some 290,000 tons, it ranks second only to Australia. This would help India to bring independence from overseas uranium sources. India already began the construction of the Advanced Heavy Water Reactor (AHWR) in 2005 with the help from Russia. The fuel for the AHWR will be a hybrid core, partly thorium-uranium 233 and partly thorium-plutonium. If, according to the Indo-US nuclear Deal India cannot reprocess the spent fuel to secure plutonium for the sake of converting thorium into fuel, the thorium reactors will never take off.

The second concern of the Indian scientists is the scope of "full civilian nuclear energy cooperation" (Section 123 of the U.S. Atomic Energy Act) that was promised to India in July 2005. India had assumed that this term encompassed the fuel cycle, namely enrichment of uranium and reprocessing of spent fuel. In the discussions leading to the adoption of the Hyde Act, U.S. legislators argued that the U.S. Atomic Energy Act of 1954 specifically forbids export of these technologies, as also heavy water production technology, to other countries. India has developed its own technologies with the help from the USSR and Russia since 1974 in these three important areas. All these now would go down the drain.

China-Pakistan Collaboration:
China has already supplied Pakistan enrichment plants and heavy water plants, and nuclear weapons as well. Chinese nuclear plants offered to Pakistan will not be under the control of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Thus, Pakistan can very well use these to produce nuclear weapons. Although China is a member of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) of 45 nations and a signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), China like in all other international spheres does not care about its obligation to any international treaty if its national interest demands so. China’s national interest is to set up Pakistan against India by providing every weapons and missiles it has got.

Does India need US nuclear power plants?
Nuclear power has been virtually insignificant in India’s energy mix in the past, and will be no more important in the future. India has been generating electricity with nuclear reactors for more than 40 years. Yet, reactors supply only 2% to 3% of its electricity today. India has not built more reactors because they have not turned out to be as safe, or as clean, or – most important – as economical as originally thought. Even if India were to achieve a 50% increase in nuclear power generation (which is unlikely) such a step would only increase India’s overall electricity output by one percent at most, and would only increase India’s overall energy output by a fraction of one percent.

The real issue is whether India needs any US assistance at all regarding its nuclear energy sector. The argument of Man Mohan Singh, as he said in the Parliament recently, that otherwise India would be a nuclear ‘Pariah’ is false. In 1974, USA has imposed sanctions so that India cannot get any nuclear related materials or technology. After 1998 USA has imposed more sanctions on India so that it cannot get any defense related technology or materials at all. However, India since 1974 has received every nuclear technology, and materials including conventional nuclear power plants, Fast Breeder reactors, reprocessing and enrichment plants and heavy water plants from the Soviet Union and Russia without any restrictions attached to these. As a result, India is nearly self-sufficient regarding nuclear technology and can produce nuclear weapons despite all the efforts of the United States to stop it.
Only for the last two years, because of its membership of the NSG, Russia now wants to supply nuclear power plants with added safeguards that the plants cannot be used to produce any nuclear weapons. However, at the same time, it has offered offshore nuclear plants to India, which would be without any restrictions. India can have both or either of the on-shore or offshore nuclear power plants from Russia and as a result for the future development of electricity production, India does not need US support at all. Thus, it really does not matter if India would refuse to sign the Indo-US treaty on nuclear energy.
Even if India needs nuclear power plants to supplement it energy requirement in future, India does not need nuclear power plants from USA. Russia can still supply whatever India needs at a much lower price.

India’s nuclear weapons:
Section 103 of the Hyde Act suggests that the US would oppose development of a capability to produce nuclear weapons by any non-nuclear weapon state within or outside the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty regime. The section requires the US to work with the 45-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group to further restrict transfers of equipment and technologies related to uranium enrichment, reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel and production of heavy water to all countries, including India. The legislation also requires the US government to seek to prevent transfer of these equipment and technologies from other members of NSG or from any other source if the transfers are suspended or terminated. Section 104(d) (2) stipulates that transfers to India cannot begin without suitable changes in NSG guidelines. There are concerns related to the supply of nuclear fuel to the plants in India, which would be used to produce nuclear weapons, by using end-use monitoring of spent fuel by the International Atomic Energy Commission and the US organizations. Also there are provisions in the legislation, which would putt a cap on fissile material production. These would end India’s nuclear weapons program.

About 90 percent of all nuclear facilities, including the Russian built Fast Breeder Reactors which can produce plutonium for nuclear weapons, will be included in the civilian sector and there will be regular inspection by the IAEA and the US authority to make sure that these facilities will not be used to produce nuclear weapons.

India for the military part of the nuclear sector will not be able to import technology or materials from any of the countries of the NSG, including Russia. Thus, India’s nuclear weapons program will disappear. This is the real aim of the Indo-US treaty. Man Mohan Singh’s recent declaration in the Indian parliament that India would maintain the option to test nuclear weapons is very theoretical. In practice, India will be unable to do that because of lack of availability of appropriate facility to develop and test nuclear weapons in near future.

Conclusion:
In the case of nuclear deal with the US also, India just like in 1991 and 1995 is accepting a subordinate position in relation to USA and the Western countries. The result will make Pakistan much stronger than India in very near future. That serves the geo-political interest of the United States with Pakistan as the bridge to the Islamic world.

The deal is primarily about making money, U.S. arms sales to India. U.S. exporters have mentioned selling as much as $1.4 billion worth of Boeing airliners, hundreds of F-16 or F/A-18 fighter jets, as well as maritime surveillance planes, advanced radar, helicopters, missile defense and other equipment. The Russian press has even complained that the nuclear deal is a ploy to squeeze Russia out of the Indian arms market.
U.S. Congress need take no action until a formal agreement for nuclear cooperation has been negotiated with India, and until the International Atomic Energy Agency has agreed with India upon suitable inspection arrangements, and until the Nuclear Suppliers Group has decided whether to change its rules to accommodate the deal. Once an agreement is made and presented for consideration, U.S. Congress can add more conditions that seem warranted. Thus, it would be a total surrender for India to the U.S.
Thus, without the nuclear deal India would be able to maintain its nuclear plants by using reprocessed plutonium as a fuel and using its own uranium in the conventional plants. It will continue to get offshore nuclear plants from Russia. In that case it will be at liberty to test further nuclear weapons in future. Those who are advocating for the deal, which has a little chance of survival given the anti-nuclear lobby in the Democratic Party, are pushing India to a very insecure future.Dr.Dipak Basu 
http://www.ivarta.com/columns/OL_070506.htm
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