Saturday, 28 June 2014

Partnership with Japan is high priority: Narendra Modi

NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday said the strategic and global partnership with Japan is a high priority for India and he was attaching great importance to his visit there which has been put off till after the budget session of Parliament ending August 14. 

Receiving a Japanese parliamentary delegation at his residence here, Modi said India and Japan share the "fundamental identity of values, interests and priorities". This was Modi's first meeting with Japanese political leaders after assuming office of the Prime Minister. 

For India, the strategic and global partnership with Japan has high priority, the Prime Minister told the delegation. 

He said though he attached great importance to his visit to Japan, which was originally scheduled in the first week of July, he had to defer it in view of the budget session of Parliament, the new government's first.

Indian media: Modi's 'monthly report card'

Media in India are highlighting Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "video initiative" to present his government's "monthly report card".
Mr Modi took oath on 26 May after his Bharatiya Janata Party won the general election.
The five-and-a-half minute video clip, released by the information and broadcasting ministry with the title "Skill, Scale and Speed - Mantra of new Governance", is "understood to be a first of its kind initiative", The Financial Express reports.
The clip, which has been released on YouTube, talks about the Modi government's "farsighted initiatives in foreign policy, efforts to improve government functioning and achievements in the economic front and tourism," the report adds.
The Asian Age adds that the video highlights the presence of South Asian leaders at the PM's oath-taking ceremony as "a diplomatic masterstroke".
According to the DNA website, the video enlists all the measures taken by Mr Modi "under his less government, more governance" policy.
Mr Modi also wrote an open letter to the citizens, promising that his government was "committed to taking India to greater heights in the years to come".
"Idea box"
Meanwhile, the Indian navy is "set to pack a more lethal punch in its armoury" by inducting two more warships into its fleet, The Deccan Herald reports.
The first ship, which is a destroyer named INS Kolkata, is likely to be inducted in Mumbai in late August or September.
The second - a class frigate meant for anti-submarine warfare - is likely to be inducted soon after, the report adds.
"With the inclusion of the two ships in the service, the Navy's surface warfare capability would get a quantum jump," the report quotes Navy chief RK Dhowan as saying.
And finally, the government has decided to introduce "idea boxes" in its offices to improve governance, The Times of India reports.
The employees will be encouraged to submit "out-of-the-box suggestions" through the idea box, it adds.

Wednesday, 25 June 2014

Home secretary identifies priorities for PM Narendra Modi




Smart policing to counter terrorism, how to tackle and defeat Maoists and Northeast insurgent groups will be the key pointers of a presentation that Union home secretary Anil Goswami will make to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Taking a cue from Union home minister Rajnath Singh's observations of the review of the ministry's key divisions, Goswami went through the presentations again to fine tune the important areas that need immediate attention to improve the country's security.
PM Modi is expected to see each ministry's presentation in the coming days to set priority areas and personally intervene in key projects. Instead of ministers, the presentations are expected to be shown to the PM by the each ministry's secretary.
Officials said the ministry has picked policing as a major area that needs immediate attention not only to preempt and defeat designs of terrorists, but also to improve general law and order. The ministry plans to rejuvenate policing and bring it on par with the police of developed nations that manage affairs with minimum intervention and non-obtrusive methods, sources said.
The other big areas that the ministry thinks need massive intervention are Maoist and northeast insurgencies. The plan that the ministry wants to put before the PM includes increased security forces — 23,000 more paramilitary personnel in Bastar, 24 unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), Herons from Israel to be precise, one full squadron of fortified M-17 helicopters and modern weaponry for the troops to handle jungle warfare in both Bastar region and the northeast

Indian-Americans lobbying for US Congress invitation for Modi

 Indian-American groups have launched a campaign to win more lawmakers' support for a move to invite Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to address a joint session of US Congress when he visits US in September. 

The ball was set rolling last week with Ed Royce, Republican chairman of the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee and a fellow House member George Holding writing to House Speaker John Boehner with the suggestion.

"As you know, India is a critical partner of the United States. In every aspect - whether it be in political, economic or security relations - the United States has no more important partner in South Asia," they wrote. 

Following up on the letter, the US India Political Action Committee (USINPAC), which calls itself the voice of Indian- Americans, has launched a "state-by-state grassroots campaign" to win support for a Congressional invitation to Modi.

Three former Indian Prime Ministers, Rajiv Gandhi, Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh have all been accorded this honour, noted USINPAC Chairman Sanjay Puri thanking Royce for his move. 

USINPAC activists and chapter leaders in North Carolina, Indiana and New York among others have actively reached out to members of Congress in their states to win their support for such a Congressional invitation, USINPAC said. 

Bridging Nations Foundation, a nonprofit policy and advocacy organization founded by Indian-American entrepreneur Prakash Ambegaonkar, to "promote shared prosperity by developing international dialogue through collaboration and learning," has also initiated a similar move. 

By granting "Prime Minister Modi the honour of addressing a joint meeting of Congress, the US would show to the Indian people and the world our sincerity in rebooting and elevating US-India relations,' it said. 

The foundation urged Indian-Americans to "pick up your phone to contact your own congressmen" and request them to write to Boehner in support of the invitation. 

The Speaker's office has not yet announced a response to the two lawmakers' letter, but an invitation to Modi is considered highly likely given how US leaders from President Barack Obama down have reached out to the Indian leader since his resounding victory. 

The previous Bush administration had revoked Modi's tourist/business visa in 2005 for his alleged inaction during the 2002 Gujarat riots under a 1998 US law barring entry to foreigners who have committed "particularly severe violations of religious freedom". 

Though late in reaching out to Modi in the run up to the elections, the US quickly made amends with Obama congratulating him on his victory and inviting him to visit Washington. Modi has accepted the invitation, though no dates have been announced.

Seers meet PM Modi, bless him to serve nation with compassion

A delegation of seers from the Bochasanvasi Akshar Puroshottam Sanstha (BAPS) Tuesday called on Prime Minister Narendra Modi. 

An official release said the seers "blessed him (Modi) to serve the nation with compassion and strength". 

According to the BAPS website, the BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha is a spiritual, volunteer-driven organisation dedicated to "improving society through individual growth by fostering the Hindu ideals of faith, unity, and selfless service"

Monday, 23 June 2014

Government clears investment hurdles, gives go ahead to seven projects worth Rs 21,000 crore


The Narendra Modi government has cleared seven big-ticket investment projects worth Rs 21,000 crore, some of whom have been held up for decades, because of hurdles ranging from environmental issues to financing problems.
The oldest among them, which has been on the drawing board for over 30 years, is a 235 kilometre railway line that is critical to tap Chhattisgarh's second largest iron orereserves and ensure the survival of the Bhilai Steel Plantwhose current iron ore sources are expected to run out in a few years.

The Steel Authority of India (SAIL), which is partly funding the rail project along with NMDC, had first proposed tapping the iron ore riches in Chhattisgarh's Rowghat area in 1983. A vital second stage forest clearance for theRs 1,105-crore railway line between Dallirajhra and Jagdalpur in the Naxal-affected Bastar district has now been signed off by new environment and forest minister Prakash Javadekar.
Apart from this railway line, red-tape problems plaguing a major hydro-electricity project in Sikkim that has been in the works since 2005, a 120-kilometre six-lane highway in Karnataka, a four million tonne iron ore processing plant being set up by state-run NMDC in Chhattisgarh and three major power projects that could raise India's electricity generation capacity by over 3,500 MW, have also been fixed.
"The resolution of long-pending issues for big investment projects has started in earnest under the new government, with policy problems facing seven large projects having been resolved already," said a senior government official aware of the development.

GIFT in Gujarat: Narendra Modi's dream project offers vital learnings for 100 smart cities ambition

Eighteen kilometers off Ahmedabad airport, two tall buildings rise out of literally nowhere. The twin towers with cobalt blue glass facades are anomalies in the otherwise brown, dusty landscape. At 122 metres and 28 floors high, the towers are the tallest in Gujarat. But height isn't really their claim to fame. The towers are the first buildings to go up in Narendra Modi's dream project: the Gujarat International Financial Tec (GIFT) City.


GIFT City, in all likelihood, will be India's first 'smart city' to be built from scratch. At GIFT City, the action is happening on the ground and under it. An army of workers is sweating in the sweltering sun, pounding roads and erecting buildings for a school, a fire station and a cooling plant. Workmen are also burrowing underground, digging what will eventually be a 12-km long maze of utility tunnels, through which everything from power cables to fibre optic cables to water pipelines will be routed.
When GIFT City's cooling towers will become operational, buildings won't use air-conditioning but district cooling technology, a far more energy-efficient process that circulates chilled water through buildings to cool them. Solid waste will be sucked out from homes and offices at 90 km/hr using pipelines leading directly to a waste processing plant.
When fully functional, GIFT City will have a command centre with information and communication technology (ICT) infrastructure spread across the city which will manage everyday chores like traffic movement.
The closest most Indians have been to experiencing anything like this is inside a cinema hall, for the price of the latest Hollywood sci-fi flick. But, that may change.
A Hundred Cities
In its election manifesto, the BJP had promised to build 100 hi-tech cities. The NDA government seems to be keen to fulfil that promise. "You cannot build cities overnight.
It takes 20-30 years to build a new city. Instead of just making new cities, our idea is to make our existing cities smart," Union minister for housing and urban development Venkaiah Naidu told ET a couple of days ago.
"There will be a mix. One, to convert an old city into a smart one. Two, to build new cities wherever possible," said Naidu.
For instance, seven new smart cities are being developed from scratch along the proposed Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC).
"We expect the first phase [40-50 sq km] of three smart cities — Dholera [Gujarat], Shendra-Bidkin [Maharashtra] and Global City [Haryana] — to be delivered by 2019," says Amitabh Kant, secretary, department of industrial policy and promotion (DIPP).
Kant, a former CEO and managing director of DMIC (he's still a director on the board), expects these cities to be home to 2-2.5 million people by 2040. India is not the only country building such cities (see What's Happening Beyond India, pg 11). Brand new smart cities are mushrooming in China, the UAE and South Korea.
Meanwhile, cities like Barcelona in Spain and Montpellier in France are implementing smart city solutions to deliver better services to their citizens. In fact, over the next 20 years, over $41 trillion is expected to be spent on smart city projects. Given this, it is not surprising that everybody from the computing giants like Cisco, IBM, Oracle to surveillance solutions vendors are licking their chops in anticipation.

"About 10% of the overall cost to build a smart city [or upgrade a current city] will be the cost for implementing surveillance solutions," says Sudhindra Holla, country manager, Axis Communications India, the Indian arm of the Swedish manufacturer of network cameras.
What's Makes it Smarter
So, what is a 'smart city' all about? "Smart cities are not about just e-governance. A smart city is one that uses technology to transform its core systems to optimize the best use of its finite resources," says Rahul Sharma, executive director and partner, global business service, IBM India.
Currently IBM is working on 2,500 smart city projects globally. At the heart of the smart city is a vast and all-pervasive ICT network that serves three broad purposes: improving a city's economic efficiency; promoting a better quality of life for citizens; and thereby promoting a sustainable urban environment.
Like Kant puts it: "In the new smart cities like Dholera [in the DMIC], we have planned for ICT as another layer of infrastructure along with roads, sewage. It is embedded right in the planning stage of the project." So, how different are the new smart cities likely to be from other cities? For one, most of them are not expected to be large urban sprawls like the existing metro cities. Take GIFT City, for instance.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi meets Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, Arun Jaitley over natural gas prices



Prime Minister Narendra Moditoday met Oil Minister Dharmendra Pradhanfor the second time in three days, apparently to hammer out an acceptable increase in natural gas prices that could be announced soon.

After nearly five hours of discussion on issues facing energy sector on Friday, Modi again called a meeting today with Pradhan where Finance Minister Arun Jaitley also joined.

Sources said at the Friday meeting the gas price revision was flagged as one of the immediate decisions that the new government needs to take to revive investor interest in the stagnant oil and gas sector.

While the new government is keen to take an early decision on the issue, it may be looking at moderating the proposed increase - from current $ 4.2 per million British thermal unit to $ 8.4, they said adding a new rate may be announced as early as this week.

Oil and gas producers say the current $ 4.2 per million British thermal unit rate is not enough to help produce from new finds in deepsea, but a new formula that had been approved by the previous government will result in increase in electricity tariff, urea cost, CNG rates and piped cooking gas price.

Given that inflation is already high and recent rise in food prices in anticipation of below-normal monsoon will add to it, the new government is debating if gas rates should be revised now and add further to inflation, they said.

Every dollar increase in gas price will lead to Rs 1,370 per ton rise in urea production cost and 45 paise per unit increase in electricity tariff. Besides, it will lead to a minimum of Rs 2.81 per kg increase in CNG price and Rs 1.89 per standard cubic meter hike in piped cooking gas.

The new government, sources said, is mulling if the Rangarajan formula approved by the previous UPA government for pricing of all domestically produced natural gas, should be tweaked or certain modifications made in its implementation.

The Rangarajan formula calls for pricing rates at an average cost of importing liquefied natural gas (LNG) into India and rates prevailing on international hubs in US and UK as well as price of gas imported into Japan.

Sources said there is a thought that the high priced Japanese imports, which have no relevance to India, should be excluded from the formula to bring down the gas price from $ 8.4 as arrived at using Rangarajan formula, to about $ 7-7.5.

Another possibility, proposed two weeks ago, is to allow higher prices only on output that is in excess of current production; or to allow higher gas prices only for production from fields discovered under the New Exploration Licensing Policy like Reliance Industries-operatedKG-D6 fields. This would mean state-owned ONGC, whose gas production comes from pre-NELP blocks, being kept out of price revision.

If this option is accepted, the new rate will apply to only 15 per cent of the domestic production (basically only KG-D6 of RIL), sources said.

Use of Hindi on Government of India’s social media platforms is only for Hindi Speaking States

The attention of the Government has been drawn to the concerns expressed about instructions imposing the use of Hindi in non Hindi speaking States. 

The Department of Official Languages, Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India had issued a circular on 10th March, 2014 stating that in keeping with the existing policy of the Government regarding use of Hindi, Government of India communication in ‘A’ category States i.e. Hindi speaking States must give equal importance to the use of Hindi in its social media platforms. The instructions reiterated that both English and Hindi must be used on official Twitter, Facebook, blogs etc by the Government of India. 

It is clarified that these instructions of the Department of Official Languages dated 10th March, 2014 do not seek to impose communication in Hindi on States which are not Hindi speaking. The instructions of Department of Official Languages have only reiterated the existing Government of India’s policy on the use of Hindi in which the use of Hindi is compulsory in Government’s communication only in the Hindi speaking States. 

The Ministry of Home Affairs in its circular dated 27.05.2014 has communicated the above guidelines of the Department of Official Languages with regard to the social media to the departments under the Ministry of Home Affairs. Therefore, this is neither a new policy nor an attempt to impose the use of Hindi on any non Hindi speaking State.

Prime Minister Chairs a High Level Review Meeting on Safety of Indian Nationals in Iraq

The issue of safety of Indian nationals continues to be a matter of high priority for government of India. The Prime Minister today chaired a high level meeting of Senior Ministers which included Home minister, the External Affairs Minister, National Security Advisor, the Heads of Indian Intelligence Agencies and security agencies, along with senior officials of Ministry of External Affairs and Indian Overseas Affairs. The Review Meeting was held to review the entire dimensions of the issue safety of Indian nationals in Iraq taking into consideration all facts that we now have available with us as well as piecing together the information that is coming to us from various access points from multiplicity of sources. 

Based on the detailed review it has been confirmed that the Indian Nationals who have been abducted in Iraq remain safe. The Govt. of India is making every effort for the situation that the Indians are caught there in Iraq, so that is resolved at the earliest. Indian Mission in Baghdad continues to assist those Indian nationals who would like to leave the region, even from areas where security is not tenuous as yet, and we keep in touch with Indian nationals in areas where security remains tenuous. The Government of India is giving the highest priority to the welfare, security and safety of Indian nationals. Following the review meetings that are being held everyday and today it has decided that any Indian National who is indigent and who desires to return but is unable to pay for his tickets, will be assisted through the Indian Community Welfare Fund (ICWF) in Iraq by our mission there. 

The Ministry of Overseas Indian affairs has decided to stop granting emigration clearances for Iraq for a period of one month or till the situation demands starting last night. This was done noticing that the flow of traffic was continuing even though there was an advisory already issued in this regard not to travel to Iraq. 

Indian officials are working with Iraqi authorities that have a visa regime which basically specifies that who comes in from a port of entry also go back from the same port of entry, this has caused some concern to those of our nationals who want to leave from the nearest port of exit or from land boundary, the matter has been taken up with Iraqi foreign ministry officials who are amenable and the issue is likely to be sorted out in coming days. All the Indian missions in the region of all the bordering countries have been informed that in case Indian people need any assistance in the matter like documentations, if they want to cross by land through these countries may be assisted fully. 

From the verified information available with the External Affairs Ministry from the conflict zone in Iraq, 16 Indian national have been moved out and brought to Baghdad for flying out of Iraq. Eight workers were moved out from Baiji, Iraq and another 8 Indian workers of LANCO project in Anbar. As far as the 46 Nurses caught in the conflict zone, we are in constant touch with them and the security situation in the area is such that it has been said to be quiet with no gunfire and nobody has intruded in the Hospital they are in. They have access to facilities like Power, water, food, communication etc. in the hospital.

Sunday, 15 June 2014

Modi's Bhutan visit first step to reassert regional sway


 Prime Minister Narendra Modi begins on Sunday his first visit abroad since taking office, arriving in Bhutan to launch a drive to reassert Indian influence in the region, offering financial and technical help and the lure of a huge market.
The tiny Buddhist nation, wedged in the Himalayas between India and China, is the closest India has to an ally in South Asia, a region of bristling rivalry where China is making inroads.
While India has been struggling recently with policy paralysis and a slowing economy, China has been building ports in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and in its "all-weather ally" Pakistan. China overtook India as the biggest foreign investor in Nepal in the first six months of this year.
Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has vowed to end the neglect of neighbours and in an unprecedented gesture, he invited all regional leaders to his inauguration last month.
On Sunday, Modi will lay the foundation of a 600 MW hydroelectric power station in Bhutan and inaugurate a parliament building constructed by India.
"Bhutan and India share a very special relationship that has stood the test of time," Modi said before his departure for Bhutan's capital, Thimphu, which is nestled in mountains and was for centuries closed to outsiders.
"Thus, Bhutan was a natural choice for my first visit abroad."
In the longer term, Modi's government aims to make India the dominant foreign investor across South Asia as well as the main provider of infrastructure loans, in the same way China has done in much of the rest of Asia and in Africa.
Consolidating ties with difficult neighbours like Pakistan and Bangladesh could reduce poverty and transform regional security relationships, Indian officials say.
    "Although India would like to have a greater say in South Asian matters beyond trade, so far we have not been able to exercise substantial political clout," said P.D. Rai, a member of parliament from Sikkim, which shares a border with Bhutan.
    "Modi's first visit to Bhutan will have to be looked at in this light."
    
    'PLEASANT SURPRISE'
India's neighbours have responded enthusiastically to Modi's overtures. His Pakistani counterpart, Nawaz Sharif, overcame resistance at home to attend the inauguration even though political ties remain fragile and marked by deep distrust.
    On Sunday, giant portraits of Modi and his Bhutanese counterpart, Tshering Tobgay, were strung up along a mountain highway with switchback bends that Modi will take from the airport to Thimphu. He opted to go by road instead of by helicopter.
School children gathered early on the tree-lined route as prayer flags tied high on poles fluttered in the wind. Beyond them rose dark slopes where people looked out from homes and monasteries clinging to unlikely perches.
    "Given that India has so many competing priorities and that the newly elected prime minister could have visited any other country, it did come as a pleasant surprise," Tobgay said in an interview with The Hindu newspaper on Saturday.
    Bhutan, the size of Switzerland and with a population of 750,000, has only recently emerged from centuries of isolation.
    Its first road was built in 1962 and television and the Internet arrived in 1999.
It is the world's first country to monitor gross national happiness an alternative to gross domestic product, to balance a tentative embrace of modernity with an effort to preserve traditions.
    But Bhutan, which the made the transition from absolute monarchy to parliamentary democracy in 2008, is struggling with high unemployment and a growing national debt.
    The government that took power 2012 says rather than talk about the happiness index, it wants to focus on obstacles to happiness.

This blog is about what is done by our newly assigned P.M. Mr. Narendra Modi and by your views it is right or wrong.