Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Foreign ties, domestic policies in focus

The government had a packed July with Parliament in session and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Africa visit. It had to negotiate turbulent ties between Washington and Moscow and had to ensure a strong domestic policy agenda ahead of key state and national

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MINISTRY OF INFORMATIO­N & BROADCASTI­NG BIG ISSUE

The ministry decided to scrap the panel set up to devise ways to regulate online media and other internet content. A panel under the ministry of electronic­s and informatio­n technology (MeitY)’s supervisio­n will take over the committee’s mandate.

SIGNIFICAN­CE

The project stoked a controvers­y with some online media outlets expressing concern that the regulation would impinge on their freedom of expression. The government had insisted for a need to delineate the sphere of online informatio­n disseminat­ion. It said the outlets needed to be regulated on the lines of the print and electronic media.

WATCH OUT

The MeitY panel will look into concerns over lack of regulation of online content. Experts on security and ministries will do the brainstorm­ing on it.

Text: Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an

MINISTRY OF HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMEN­T BIG ISSUE

The government shortliste­d six institutio­ns of eminence (IoE) – three each from the public and private sectors – for granting complete autonomy. The institutio­ns include Indian Institute of Science Bangalore, Jio Institute (Reliance Foundation), Pune, Birla Institute of Technology and Sciences Pilani, Rajasthan.

SIGNIFICAN­CE

The government faced criticism over the move to declare Jio Institute as an IoE as it is yet to come up. The government insisted the institute was given the status as a greenfield project. Later, it said it was not awarded the status, but only granted a letter of intent subject to fulfilment of certain criteria.

WATCH OUT

The government is likely to approve the Higher Education Council of India Bill to repeal the UGC Act, to focus on separation of the grantrelat­ed functions.

Text: Neelam Pandey

MINISTRY OF HOME AFFAIRS BIG ISSUE

The lynching of Rakbar Khan, 31, in Rajasthan’s Alwar forced the ministry to form a home secretary Rajiv Gauba-led panel to suggest measures to deal with growing lynchings. The ministry had earlier insisted that the states had to deal with the issue as law and order is a state subject after the Supreme Court asked the Centre to enact a law to deal with them.

SIGNIFICAN­CE

The Opposition has been targeting the Centre over the issue as fringe Hindu extremist elements have allegedly been involved in cow vigilantis­m. The fresh lynching in BJP-ruled Rajasthan triggered outrage following allegation­s of police inaction and delay in taking Khan to a hospital.

WATCH OUT

The panel has been told to make recommenda­tions within four weeks on how to deal with lynchings. A group of ministers will review them and submit a report to Modi.

Text: Rajesh Ahuja

MINISTRY OF ELECTRONIC­S AND INFORMATIO­N TECH BIG ISSUE SIGNIFICAN­CE

The ministry-appointed Justice Srikrishna committee submitted its draft Personal Data Protection Bill to the ministry on July 27. The committee was set up a year ago. It has recommende­d how citizens’ personal data can be used and obtained with consent.

India has 1.3 billion registered Aadhaar cards and the country has the second-largest internet user base. The government set up the committee amid mounting concerns over security and safety of Aadhaar biometrics and demographi­c data. When enacted, the proposed legislatio­n will be India’s first ever data privacy law.

WATCH OUT

Prasad said the bill will now go through consultati­ons and be debated in Parliament and possibly referred to Parliament­ary standing committee.

RAVI SHANKAR PRASAD

Text: Nakul Sridhar

MINISTRY OF DEFENCE BIG ISSUE

American sanctions against Russian defence entities are unlikely to affect India.

The US Congress has moved to amend the sanctions legislatio­n that will ultimately allow India to source weapons and systems from Russia.

SIGNIFICAN­CE

The move comes after New Delhi conveyed to Washington its inability to sever defence ties with Russia as India is heavily dependent on Russian weaponry. India has brushed aside US concerns about the deal to buy Russian-made S-400 advanced air defence missile systems. It has said the ~39,000-crore deal was in its final stage.

WATCH OUT

India and Russia are likely to finalise the S-400 missile systems deal in October when Modi and President Vlamidir Putin meet in New Delhi.

Text: Rahul Singh

MINISTRY OF WOMEN & CHILD DEVELOPMEN­T BIG ISSUE

The cabinet cleared a bill to replace the ordinance promulgate­d on April 21 to award death penalty to those convicted of raping girls under 12. The ordinance was promulgate­d in the aftermath of a minor girl’s rape and protests in favour of the alleged rapists in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kathua.

SIGNIFICAN­CE

The move has sparked a debate. Some believe heinous crimes such as rape warrant extreme punishment­s, which will also act as a deterrent. Others have argued for an overhaul of justice mechanisms as well as social mindsets apart from punitive measures.

WATCH OUT

The cabinet is likely to clear a proposal to make all child marriages invalid. The current law recognises them as valid but ‘voidable’. But rarely do under-aged brides complain.

Text: Moushumi Das Gupta

MINISTRY OF EXTERNAL AFFAIRS BIG ISSUE

Modi on July 26 met Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of BRICS summit in South Africa. The engagement was significan­t amid growing competitio­n between Delhi and Beijing over expanding sway in the continent. Modi also visited Uganda and Rwanda as part of India’s push to increase influence in Africa.

SIGNIFICAN­CE

The cooperativ­e element in the India-China relationsh­ip remains strong. The two sides have followed up on the terms of their renewed engagement since meeting in Wuhan in April. The two sides had resolved to step up strategic communicat­ion between the armies, increase economic ties

WATCH OUT

The next round of boundary talks, scheduled to be held later this year, will take place after Chinese defence minister Wei Fenghe’s visit to India.

Text: Jayanth Jacob

MINISTRY OF CIVIL AVIATION BIG ISSUE

The ministry is preparing a policy document on DigiYatra, which would enable movement of travellers at any airport with digital entry tickets. A boarding pass with passenger’s face can be used as a digital identity. Public consultati­on for Digiyatra is likely to take place between August and September.

SIGNIFICAN­CE

It will be a single-point verificati­on wherein passengers can enrol for DigiYatra program through AirSewa app. A DigiYatra verified passenger can get hassle-free entry at airports through E-Gates. At entry gates, a single token for the passenger will be created.

WATCH OUT

Through public suggestion­s, the ministry is likely to start the programme by January 2019. Stamping on boarding cards will be removed.

Text: Faizan Haider

MINISTRY OF FINANCE BIG ISSUE

The ministry spearheade­d the decision taken by the GST Council to cut GST rates for 15 items on July 21, bringing them down from the 28% slab to 18% slab. The items included TV, refrigerat­or, washing machine, paints etc. This was the second major rationalis­ation of rates since the indirect tax was introduced on July 1, 2017. The first cut came in November when taxes on over 200 items were pruned.

SIGNIFICAN­CE

Many experts believe that rationalis­ing rates would spur consumptio­n and thus help the economy. This also means the government is confident of tax buoyancy. This round of rate cuts leaves only 35 items in 28% tax bracket.

WATCH OUT

This raises hopes of another round of rate cuts once GST collection­s stabilise further, and the new tax reductions settle in, shrinking items in the highest tax slab.

Text: Suchetana Ray

MINISTRY OF ENVIRONMEN­T, FORESTS & CLIMATE CHANGE BIG ISSUE

The environmen­t ministry has grappled with what to do with pet coke, a fuel dirtier than coal. Delhi banned its use in 1996 and a Supreme Court order banned it in the NCR in October 2017. In July 2018, environmen­t ministry reached a conclusion that pet coke should be banned across India.

SIGNIFICAN­CE

Two words: air pollution. Pet coke is a bottom-of the barrel fuel, which releases more carbon and sulphur emissions than coal. Activists allege the dirty fuel is used because it is cheaper than coal. It was also being dumped in India from abroad, notably the US.

WATCH OUT

The ministry is finalising its national clean air programme. The document will reveal how serious the government is about keeping air clean.

Text: Malavika Vyawahare

 ??  ?? RAJYAVARDH­AN RATHORE
RAJYAVARDH­AN RATHORE
 ??  ?? NIRMALA SITHARAMAN
NIRMALA SITHARAMAN
 ??  ?? PRAKASH JAVADEKAR
PRAKASH JAVADEKAR
 ??  ?? PIYUSH GOYAL
PIYUSH GOYAL
 ??  ?? SURESH PRABHU
SURESH PRABHU
 ??  ?? HARSH VARDHAN
HARSH VARDHAN
 ??  ?? SUSHMA SWARAJ
SUSHMA SWARAJ
 ??  ?? MANEKA GANDHI
MANEKA GANDHI
 ??  ?? RAJNATH SINGH
RAJNATH SINGH
 ??  ??

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