Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

House session may get pushed to Sept

MONSOON SESSION Chances of starting proceeding­s safely in Aug appear to be thinning due to the rise in Covid-19 cases, say officials

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

THERE IS A WINDOW TILL SEPTEMBER 23 TO START THE MONSOON SESSION, A MAXIMUM 6-MONTH GAP ALLOWED BETWEEN TWO SESSIONS

NEW DELHI: A September schedule is starting to look more likely for the much-awaited monsoon session of Parliament as the chances of safely starting proceeding­s in August appear to be thinning due to the continued rise in Covid-19 cases in India, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter.

India’s top legislativ­e authoritie­s, including Rajya Sabha chairman M Venkaiah Naidu and Lok Sabha speaker Om Birla, are keeping a close watch on the status of the pandemic in the Capital and elsewhere to finalise the dates for the session. An improvemen­t in Delhi in recent weeks offers a glimmer of hope, but greater progress in the Capital’s fight against Covid-19, and some measure of control in other parts of the country may be needed to ensure suitable attendance by members, the people cited above indicated.

Under the Indian Constituti­on, the duration between the end of one session and the start of the next cannot exceed six months. So, Parliament has a window till September 23 to start the monsoon session, after the budget session ended on March 23, two days before a 68-day national lockdown kicked in.

Once the dates are finalised, officials involved in the planning of the session say they would require at least four weeks to put the arrangemen­ts in place.

“Monsoon session in August looks very tight. Both the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha secretaria­ts have discussed a couple of seating options with the government. A final view on them is yet to be taken. Once the Union Cabinet decides, it will take about four weeks to put in place necessary arrangemen­ts,” said an official who asked not to be named.

Logistical issues are challenge because scheduling the session will require special Covid-19 arrangemen­ts -- from the seating of MPS to ensure social distancing , to the timing of the proceeding­s in the Rajya Sabha and the Lok Sabha, which are likely to work in shifts to avoid crowding.

The session may be a short one, with lawmakers spread across different buildings and attending hybrid — mix of physical and digital — proceeding­s.

“There’s not a heavy business to transact. The priority of the government is to clear the ordinances promulgate­d in the past few months and the Opposition might press for debates on the Covid pandemic and the Indo-china border conflict,” said a second official involved in the preparatio­ns.

Officials close to Naidu said the Rajya Sabha chairman had secured isolation-related relaxation­s for MPS travelling to Delhi to attend Parliament or parliament­ary committee meetings.

“Naidu told the home ministry that government officials don’t have to undergo isolation after travelling to other places. If they can be exempted from isolation for doing official duty, MPS too travelling on official duty should be given the same exemptions. The home ministry has agreed,” a third official said.

Giant screens to beam parliament­ary proceeding­s, with engineers from the National Informatic­s Centre on call, and provisions for possible latency -these are among the issues Naidu and Birla and their teams are discussing.

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