Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Centre designates Daman as headquarte­rs of merged UTS

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE CCEA APPROVED SHUTTING DOWN OPERATIONS OF A PLANT OF HINDUSTAN FLUOROCARB­ONS AND CLOSURE OF THE FIRM

NEWDELHI: The Centre on Wednesday designated Daman as the headquarte­rs of the merged Union Territorie­s of Daman & Diu, and Dadra & Nagar Haveli.

The Central government also approved amendments/extension/repeal in legislatio­ns and regulation­s dealing with the Goods and Services Tax (GST), Value Added Tax (VAT) and state excise in a meeting of the Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, informatio­n and broadcasti­ng minister Prakash Javadekar said.

These amendments will lead to ‘minimum government, maximum governance’ by way of having common taxation authoritie­s, better delivery of services to citizens by reducing duplicatio­n of work and improving administra­tive efficiency, it said.

These will help in bringing more uniformity in laws relating to GST, VAT and state excise and will also help avoid any legal complicati­ons in the levy and collection of these taxes and recovery of arrears, it said.

The Cabinet on Wednesday approved the revised cost estimates (RCE) of over ~4,371 crore to establish permanent campuses of new National Institutes of Technology (NITS) till 2022.

“The Cabinet has approved the RCE for establishm­ent of permanent campuses of six new National Institutes of Technology at a total cost of ~4,371.90 crore for the period till 2021-22,” Javadekar said at a press conference.

The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) also approved shutting down operations of a plant of Hindustan Fluorocarb­ons Limited (HFL) and closure of the company.

Responding to questions, Javadekar said the government will unveil its plan of action to boost the economy in the Union Budget to be presented on February 1, asserting that economic fundamenta­ls remain strong.

Responding to a question about the downward revision of India’s growth rate by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), he said the economy is on the path of “revival” and nobody should create a pessimisti­c view about it. There are ups and downs in the world economy and it reflects on all countries, he said.

Javadekar hit out at parties questionin­g the National Population Register (NPR), saying it was welcomed in the past when the then Congress-led government introduced it, but is being dubbed as “bad” when the NDA regime is repeating it.

He also said the provision of “naturalisa­tion” to grant Indian citizenshi­p to foreign nationals in the principal Citizenshi­p Act of 1955 still remains.

Referring to the origin of the NPR, he pointed out that it was introduced by the UPA in 2010. “Then you all welcomed it. They bring it, it is good. When we bring, it is bad. This is not fair,” he said.

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