Sunday, June 22, 2014

Indian Foreign Policy in West Asia and other selections


People shout slogans in support for the call to arms by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who is the highest religious authority for Shias in Iraq, in Najaf, south of Baghdad, June 13, 2014. (Photo: Alaa Al-Marjani/Courtesy Reuters)

OPINION » LEAD


Updated: June 21, 2014 00:28 IST

A time for Arab, Asian statesmanship

TALMIZ AHMAD
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The dramatic success of ISIS in Iraq shows that statesmanship is called for in the region or else West Asia could be consumed by jihadi and sectarian violence. This is also an opportunity for Asian countries that have high stakes in regional stability to promote dialogue and confidence-building measures in the Gulf

On June 10, the world awoke to the disquieting news that a shadowy jihadigroup, till then known for its violent activity in the Syrian conflict, had captured Iraq’s premier town of Mosul. After this, over the next few days, there were reports of the capture of other towns — Baiji, Tikrit, and then north to Tal Afar on the Syrian border — so that within a week, the jihadis seemed to be grouping just outside Baghdad. The group was identified as ISIS — the “Islamic State of Iraq and [Greater] Syria,” a jihadigrouping affiliated with al-Qaeda.

Needed, more deliberation

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Many of the key recommendations of the high-level Financial Sector Legislative Reforms Commission (FSLRC) continue to attract criticism, more than a year after its report was released. Chaired by retired Supreme Court Judge B.N. Srikrishna, the FSLRC was given a wide mandate to prepare a blueprint for a new financial architecture. The report has evoked strong responses, with some calling it a potential game-changer and others faulting it for being out of touch with the Indian reality. The FSLRC has had to grapple with several dissenting views among its members. It is not surprising therefore that the report of the commission dealing with a radical overhaul of the financial architecture — an enormously time-consuming process — has remained on the back burner for a while. The renewed interest in the subject is probably due to the fact that the new NDA government would look at the subject afresh and implement some of the less controversial recommendations. Among the most contentious proposals of the FSLRC involve the setting up of two entities: one, a new “super-regulator”, the Unified Financial Regulatory Agency (UFRA); and two, a Financial Sector Appellate Tribunal to review regulatory decisions. The former would be solely responsible for the oversight of the securities market, insurance, pensions and commodities. In effect, it will take over the functions of the existing regulators, including SEBI and the IRDA. If this proposal is implemented, the financial sector will have just two regulators, the RBI and the proposed UFRA. In the new set-up, the RBI will have some of its existing functions, such as regulation of organised financial trading, taken away.

Beginning a new conversation on women

    SHAMIKA RAVI
    ANURADHA SAJJANHAR
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Modi’s ‘10-point agenda’ in its current form would be significantly hampered if the government does not take a strong look at injustices against women

Riding on the aspirations of the electorate, of which women are a significant share, Narendra Modi’s victory is commonly seen as a vote for development. But the last few weeks’ horrific reminder of how India publically consumes violence against women, in conjunction with the Prime Minister’s ‘10-point agenda’ for the new government, demonstrates a disturbing lack of policy vision for women’s issues. More specifically, it is important to point out the glaring absences in Mr. Modi’s vision. While he has urged us to not engage in ‘psychological analysis’ of rapes but instead prioritise ‘respect’ for women, this rhetoric indicates a feeble understanding of the sustained gross neglect faced by women in India. Their dismal state at present is reflected in the Gender Inequality Index which ranks us at 132 out of 146 countries. How can any country develop while denying equal rights to life and liberty to half its population?

Cutting through legal clutter

    SRIJONI SEN
    ARGHYA SENGUPTA
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Illustration: Deepak Harichandan
The HinduIllustration: Deepak Harichandan


Burdensome and unnecessary laws and regulations not only impose heavy economic costs, but also provide fertile grounds for corruption

In his first meeting with all government secretaries, Prime Minister Narendra Modi called for the identification of 10 laws from each ministry that are burdensome and should be repealed. This clearly stemmed from a point that found repeated mention in the BJP’s manifesto — the need for periodic review and removal of outdated laws.
Such an initiative is long overdue. India has been characterised as one of the most over-regulated countries in the world. No central database of all laws and regulations exists in the country. If such a database existed, it would have been of encyclopaedic proportions. There are over 1,200 statutes at the Union level alone, while exact figures for Union regulations and the total number of State laws are not easily discernible. Burdensome and unnecessary laws and regulations not only impose heavy economic costs, but also provide fertile grounds for corruption, contribute to the perpetuation of red-tapism and the classical Indian malaise of the ‘Inspector Raj.’ To any right-thinking person, such laws need to be repealed.



Pratap Bhanu Mehta | 

Twitter@@pbmehta | June 20, 2014 12:57 am  

The most important signal this government needs to send is that it is going to write a new chapter in the history of Indian institutions. The most important signal this government needs to send is that it is going to write a new chapter in the history of Indian institutions.
It seems that the NDA has not learnt the first lesson from the UPA’s mistakes. It appears hell bent on continuing the decimation of institutions that has been the bane of Indian politics. The same contagion of small-mindedness that corroded the UPA is spreading its poison, under the facade of the new. The joke doing the rounds in Delhi, that the party in power has changed but the politicians, lawyers and bureaucrats have not, seems to be coming true, alas. The surprise is not that it’s business as usual. The surprise is how quickly business as usual has asserted itself

Monday, November 11, 2013

Survey Politics

When Delhi surveys clash: India Today predicts BJP win“The India Today Group-ORG poll shows BJP is poised to win the elections with 36 of the 70 seats,” declares the latest Delhi poll survey, which touts BJP’s Harsh Vardhan as new “squeaky clean middle class icon” on the block. Despite his late anointment, the good doctor was named by 19 percent of the voters as the best CM candidate, trailing a mere three percent behind Kejriwal’s 22 percent. Sheila Dixit wins the personal popularity poll with 28 percent. (Results not available online) The BJP-friendly results — underlined by the accompanying puff piece on Harsh Vardhan — offer a sharp contrast to other polls tomtoming the arrival of AAP. Arvind Kejriwal‘s party scored 18 seats in the latest C-Voter survey and a whopping 19-25 seats in the CNN-IBN/CSDS count. These other polls offer little hope of an outright BJP victory, predicting anywhere between 22-28 seats for the saffron party.

Read full article in First Post

The Weather Vane Speaks
That opinion polls generate a lot of heat in the media is beyond doubt evident in the space and airtime devoted to them. As for their benefits in an age of politician- or corporate-owned media, the question is answered by Bhaskar Rao, director, Centre for Media Studies, credited with having started opinion polls in the country. “A quarter or more of news media is under control of political interests and corporates, raising the question of motives. What a poll survey brings out and projects is context-specific, and its relevance and even accuracy would alto­gether be different in a different context and at a different time, making the very exercise futile, even misleading. Taking recourse and linking the concern in this regard to press freedom or free speech is an industry perspective meant to divert the core issue,” says Rao

Read full article in The Outloo

The effect of opinion polls on voters

Apart from CSDS-Lokniti, no opinion pollster in India deems it necessary to publish the methodology. We are forced to accept the numbers without any information on how many people were surveyed, how those people were chosen and what is the margin of error in prediction. Without this information, it is impossible to take any opinion poll seriously.
In the US, trade bodies such as the American Association for Public Opinion Research or the National Council on Public Polls (NCPP) enforce stringent standards on their member organizations.
According to the NCPP website, for example, any opinion poll whose results are released to the public needs to disclose information on the sponsor of the poll, sample size, methodology and margin of error, among other things, and “endeavor to have print and broadcast media include the above items in their news stories”.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Social Media is a great equaliser

सोशल मीडिया का हस्तक्षेप यानी, ठहरो कि जनता आती है

ग्वालियर में राहुल गांधी की रैली खत्म ही हुई थी कि मीनाक्षी लेखी का ट्वीट आ गया माँ की  बीमारी का नाम लेने पर तीन कांग्रेसी सस्पेंड कर दिए गए, अब राहुल गांधी वही कर रहे हैं। उधर दिग्विजय सिंह ने ट्विटर पर नरेन्द्र मोदी को चुनौती दी, मुझसे बहस करो। रंग-बिरंगे ट्वीटों की भरमार है। माना जा रहा है कि सन 2014 के लोकसभा चुनाव में पहली बार सोशल मीडिया का असर देखने को मिलेगा। इस साल अप्रेल में 'आयरिस नॉलेज फाउंडेशन और'इंटरनेट एंड मोबाइल एसोसिएशन ऑफ़ इंडियाने 'सोशल मीडिया एंड लोकसभा इलेक्शन्सशीर्षक से एक अध्ययन प्रकाशित किया था, जिसमें कहा गया था कि भारत की 543 में से 160 लोकसभा सीटें ऐसी हैं जिनके नतीजों पर सोशल मीडिया का प्रभाव पड़ेगा। सोशल मीडिया का महत्व इसलिए भी है कि चुनाव से 48 घंटे पहले चुनाव प्रचार पर रोक लगने के बाद भी फेसबुक, ट्विटर और ब्लॉग सक्रिय रहेंगे। उनपर रोक की कानूनी व्यवस्था अभी तक नहीं है। दिल्ली में आप के पीछे सोशल मीडिया की ताकत भी है।

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Two decades of Congress Vs BJP




Seats
1991
1996
1998
1999
2004
2009


Cong
BJP
Cong
BJP
Cong
BJP
Cong
BJP
Cong
BJP
Cong
BJP
AP
42
25
01
22

22
04
05
07
29
-
33
-
Arunachal
02
02





02
-
-
-
02
-
Assam
14
08
02
05
01
10
01
10
02
09
02
07
04
Bihar
40
01
05
02
18
05
04
04
23
03
05
02
12
Chhattisgrah
11








01
10
01
10
Goa
02
02



02
-

02
01
01
01
01
Guj
26
05
20
10
16
07
19
06
20
12
14
11
15
Haryana
10
09

02
04
03
01
-
05
09
01
09
-
HP
04
02
02
04

01
03
-
03
03
01
01
03
J&K
06


04
01
01
02
-
02
02

02
-
J’Khand
14








06
01
01
08
Karnataka
28
23
04
05
06
09
13
18
07
08
18
06
19
Kerala
20
13

07

08

08
-
-
-
13
-
MP
29
27
12
08
27
10
30
11
29
04
25
12
16
Maha
48
38
05
15
18
33
04
10
13
13
13
17
09
Manipur
02
01

02
-




01
-
02
-
Meghalaya
02
02

01

02
-
01

01
-
01
-
Mizoram
01
01

01


-


-
-
01
-
Nagaland
01


01

01

01

-
-
-
-
Orissa
21
13

16

05
07
02
09
02
07
06
-
Punjab
13


02


02
08
01
02
03
08
01
Rajasthan
25
13
12
12
12
18
05
09
16
04
21
20
04
Sikkim
01








-
-
-
-
T Nadu
39
28




03
02
04
10
-
08
-
Tripura
02
02







-
-
-
-
UP
80
05
51
05
52

57
10
29
09
10
21
10
U’khand
05








01
03
05
-
W Bengal
42
05

09

01
01
03
02
06
-
06
01














Andman N
01
01

01




01
01
-
-
01
Chandigarh
01
01


01

01
01

01
-
01
-
D& Nagar Haveli
01
01

01


01


-
-
-
01
Daman
01

01




01

01
-
-
01
Delhi
07
02
05
02
05
01
06
-
07
06
01
07
-
Lakshadweep
01
01

01

01

01

-
-
01
-
Puducherry
01
01

01



01

-
-
01
-


232
120
140
161
141
182
114
182
145
138
206
116