The government officers in Maharashtra will now have to write their names, designations and the date while signing a file or putting any remark on it.
General administration department has issued a government resolution (GR) to this effect.
Name, designation and date will have to be mentioned while writing any remark on the file, so as to make it easier to identify, later, the officer who handled the file.
“At present, the officials only sign a particular file and put their remark….this makes it difficult to identify the official who put erroneous remark (during future inquiry),” says the GR.
“Some officials are in the habit of putting dates in ineligible handwriting, which delays the inquiry process. The new rules would help make the officials more responsible when he or she puts remark on a file in sensitive issues,” an official from the GAD department said.
The GR, signed by S M Sable, joint secretary, GAD, also states that if there are two or more officials with the same surname, initials should be written with the surname.
“Officials should follow the Union Government’s office manual in this regard,” the GR says.
Several agencies have come forward to take up development of Maharashtra’s new district Palghar, state Tribal Development Minister Vishnu Sawra said.
The state government wants to go in for all round development of the Palghar district, carved out of Thane last year, and wants to make it a model district with a modern outlook, he said.
“The proposals (for development by various agencies) will be brought before the Cabinet for its approval and awarding the contract to one agency to be selected for the mega task,” said Sawra, who is also the Guardian Minister of Palghar.
The City and Industrial Development Corporation (CIDCO), Maharashtra State Road Development Corporation (MSRDC), Public Works Department (PWD) and even Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA) and Maharashtra Housing and Development Authority (MHADA) are ready to develop the district, he said.
“A couple of them have given us the project report for the same and the others are in the process of submitting their plans,” Sawra said.
The state government will examine all the proposals and go in for the best plan as it wants to develop Palghar into a most modern district which will be a model in the state and the country as well, he said.
State PWD Minister Eknath Shinde had last month indicated that his department or the MSRDC could undertake the task to develop the district.
A Bollywood actor has been booked for allegedly raping a television actress, police said on Sunday.
A case has been registered against actor Vishal Thakkar under relevant sections of rape and other offences, Charkop police station’s senior inspector Ramchandra Gaikwad said.
The victim, an actress who has worked in several TV serials, has alleged that the accused raped her in his house, police said, without divulging further details.
An FIR has been registered against the actor under IPC sections 376 (rape), 420 (cheating), 323, 509 (word, gesture or act intended to insult the modesty of a woman) and 506 (criminal intimidation), they said.
The actor has not yet been arrested. Thakkar has done small roles in movies like Tango Charlie and Chandni Bar.
A seven-year-old boy was allegedly sodomised by a 14-year-old teenager in Virar town in Palghar district neighbouring Mumbai, police said.
According to police, the teenager had been allegedly showing obscene video clippings to the victim since last three weeks and ‘sexually assaulted’ him recently.
A case under various sections of Indian Penal Code and the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act (POCSO) 2012 was registered against the teenager at Virar police station yesterday, said Assistant Police Inspector NB Done.
The accused had also threatened the boy with dire consequences if he disclosed the incident to anyone, police said, adding the accused has been identified and further investigations are on.
The film fraternity have urged the Central and Maharashtra governments to provide an impetus to film-related education.
Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis said the state government will try to understand the concerns of the actors and artists, and bring together various other stakeholders in the film industry keeping in mind the interests of students from smaller towns and cities.
Actor Zeeshan Ayyub, an alumnus of National School of Drama (NSD), Delhi and worked in films like “Tanu Weds Manu Returns” and “Raanjhanaa”, said the government has already has existing policies to help people from arts and culture, but it does not really help due to various reasons.
“What the government can do is it can actually start providing financial aid like homes at government rate, the instruments required for performing arts at cheaper rates to help people survive in the industry,” said.
The 31-year-old actor said that with government’s aid, people will feel confident of thinking to take up arts and acting as a profession.
He also said rather than conferring awards, the Cultural Ministry can put benchmarks and chose three-four people every year and offer them aids, this way new talent can be lured and retained in the profession.
Actor Anil Mange, who has worked in films like “Singh is Bling” and will be next seen in Shah Rukh Khan’s “Raees”, has also urged the government to facilitate more training institutes in fine arts amidst FTII controversy.
Students at the prestigious Pune-based FTII have boycotted their classes for over four months protesting the appointment of TV actor and BJP member Gajendra Chauhan as its chairman.
The city’s 20-year development plan till 2034 is likely to get a ‘Swedish touch’ with the western European nation extending its expertise to help develop Mumbai as a ‘smart city’ that will be economically, ecologically and socially sustainable.
Swedish urban development and IT minister Mehmat Kaplan, who was in the city over the weekend, met State chief secretary Swadheen Kshatriya and BrihanMumbai Municipal Commissioner (BMC) Ajoy Mehta to discuss how the country could collaborate with the state as well as the richest city corporation on the continent.”
We have the expertise in various fields and we would like to collaborate with the Maharashtra government and offer our expertise in waste management, digital urban land management and urban transportation,” Kaplan said.
He said if Mumbai is to become a smart city, there are various factors that are involved which need to be well managed, which include waste and land management and transportation among others.”
Sometimes we do not know how city planning is to be dealt with.
The Geographic Information System (GIS) is an important part when you are dealing with 3D urban land management.
If this is done, we can actually make the decisions faster and socially sustainable,” he said.
The minister said that through the collection of big data, the mapped information will be available online and there will be no need to use paper and pile up files as we see in the planning offices in megapolis.”
We need to take important step of digitalising the urban land management which is a quite new technology but will make it cheaper in middle and long term,” Kaplan added.
The megapolis’ development plan till 2034 was highly criticised for large number of errors in the proposed plan, which was subsequently scrapped by the state government.
The development plan had proposed a considerable hike in Mumbai’s FSI and also opened up the so far protected south Mumbai for utilisation of transfer of development rights as floating FSI.
The overall increase in bulk FSI was linked to proximity to mass transit modes, but not indexed to provision of physical and social infrastructure.
Later, the chief minister had asked the BMC to prepare a revised DP and accordingly in July retired IAS officer Ramanath Jha was appointed to head the revision process.
Even as Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday reportedly expressed his worries over BJP leaders’ controversial remarks on cow slaughter and Dadri lynching, the RSS mouthpiece, Panchjanya, has justified the killing of Mohammad Iqlakh over rumours that he had eaten beef in his house.
Panchjanya, in its latest edition, has carried a cover story stating that the Vedas order killing of “sinners” who slaughter cows.
The article which is being run as a cover story in the latest issue of Panchjanya added that the Dadri victim may have slaughtered a cow under the influence of anti-national traditions.
“Vedas order killing of the sinner who kills a cow. Cow slaughter is an issue of honour for Hindus. The Dadri victim perhaps slaughtered a cow under the influence of bad deeds,” the article said.
The article is being written by Vinay Krishna Chaturvedi, the editor of the journal Lafz.
Chaturvedi also slammed writers who returned their Sahitya Akademi awards in protest over the Dadari murder and called them insensitive to Hindu sentiments over cow slaughter.
It alleges that madrasas and the Muslim leadership teach Indian Muslims to hate the country’s traditions. “Iqlakh (the Dadri victim) perhaps slaughtered a cow under the influence of such bad deeds,” it states.
However, RSS distanced itself from the article saying that the writer has expressed his views and is not a member of the editorial board of the magazine. “The writer has expressed his views. He is not a member of editorial board of the magazine. This is not an editorial,” said Hitesh Shankar, the Panchjanya editor.
Meanwhile, Congress General Secretary Digvijay Singh took to Twitter to take a dig at the BJP chief Amit Shah.
“Amit Shah summoned BJP leaders including a chief minister and a Union minister. RSS mouthpiece have not supported this issue.”
“Will Amit Shah now summon Mohan Bhagwat or the editor of Panchjanya?” he further tweeted.
Earlier in the day, PM Modi pulled up five BJP leaders for making controversial comments on beef and Dadri lynching incident and told them to refrain from such remarks.
The stern message was conveyed by Amit Shah in separate meetings he held at the party office in the national capital with the five, including Haryana Chief Minister ML Khattar.
Others who faced PM Modi’s wrath were ministers Mahesh Sharma and Sanjeev Baliyan, MP Sakshi Maharaj and Uttar Pradesh legislator Sangeet Som.
Shah told them all that PM Modi was “upset” with the kind of remarks they have made related to beef consumption in the wake of last month’s murder of a Muslim man in Uttar Pradesh.
The man, Mohammad Iqlakh, 50, was dragged out of his house in Dadri area in Uttar Pradesh and lynched by a mob following rumours of eating beef. His son was also seriously injured.
Rahul Gandhi would bring with him a new team for Congress when he takes over as its President by March next year or even earlier, senior leader Jairam Ramesh on Sunday said, indicating that leaders above the age of 60 may only play an advisory role under the new dispensation.
While suggesting a graceful exit for leaders in the 70-plus category, the senior Congress leader emphasised that the transition process would be smooth and that Rahul will not treat seniors the way Modi treated his seniors in the party.
“There is (will be) no bloodbath (when Rahul takes over).I don’t think Gandhi will treat the seniors the way Modi has treated the seniors. Modi has sent (LK) Advani), Murli Manohar Joshi, Yashwant Sinha, Jaswant Singh…Everybody to Siberia”, the Congress Rajya Sabha member said.
Earlier this year, the former Environment Minister expected Rahul to take over as party President in 2015 but now says it’s taking time as the latter is busy picking his team and shaping the structure of the party under him.
Ramesh said when Rahul assumes charge, it’s not one individual taking over; it’s a whole team being put in place.
“So, he (Rahul) has been spending a lot of time figuring out the structure plus the people. Structure without the people is meaningless, and the people without structure is not very useful. So, from what I gather in the past few months he has been devoting time to finalising the structure as well as the people to fill that structure”.
On when Rahul would take over, he noted that “(calendar year) 2015 is not yet over” and said it’s certain to happen by March (next year) at the most but added that only two people. (Sonia) Gandhi and (Rahul) Gandhi, as he put it know the exact time-line.
The expected change of guard in Congress leadership is “undoubtedly” a generation shift, seen for the first time after Rajiv Gandhi became Prime Minister in 1984 following the assassination of his mother Indira Gandhi, Ramesh said.
“We must get the 30-year-olds and 40-year-olds in positions of prominence (in Congress). The time for 60-year-olds, 70-year-olds and the 80-year-olds is over”, he expressed.
With the collegium system staging a comeback after a gap of six months, it has its task cut out — to fill over 400 vacancies in high courts and appointing full-time chief justices in eight states.
The government on its part will have to decide on nearly 120 recommendations made by the collegium before the system was overturned by the National Judicial Appointments Commission Act (NJAC) which came into force on April 13.
In a landmark judgment on Friday, the apex court had struck down as unconstitutional the NJAC Act that was brought in to replace the over two-decade-old collegium system of judges appointing judges in the higher judiciary.
The judgment, that will enable the collegium system to continue, also declared as unconstitutional the 99th amendment to the Constitution to bring in the NJAC Act.
As per the data collated by the Department of Justice in the Law Ministry, as on October 1, there were 406 vacancies in the high courts. The approved strength of the 24 high courts is 1,017 and they are at present functioning with 611 judges.
The data states that the High Courts of Bombay, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, Punjab and Haryana, Karnataka, Patna, Rajasthan, Gujarat and Gauhati have acting chief justices.
While the new law scrapped the collegium system, the Chief Justice of India had refused to take part in a meeting with the Prime Minister of the selection committee of the panel under the NJAC law, thus leaving the new system in a limbo.
Therefore, no judge could be elevated as chief justice of a high court, transferred to another high court or elevated to the Supreme Court as there was no system in place for the purpose.
To prevent hoarding of pulses and check price rise, the Centre Sunday imposed stock limits on pulses held by licenced food processors, importers, exporters as well as large departmental retailers such as Big Bazaar.
It has also directed state governments to intensify anti-hoarding operations and keep a check on black-marketing and profiteering by traders.
The stock limits on holding of pulses have been in place for the last few years. Recently, while extending the stock limits on the commodity for one more year till September 2016, the government had exempted these four categories.
“To increase availability and prevent hoarding of pulses, government amended the central order under Essential Commodities Act, 1955 with immediate effect to enable imposition of stock limits on pulses sourced from imports, stocks held by exporters…
“… Stocks to be used as raw-materials by licenced food processors and stocks of large departmental retailers,” Food Ministry said in a statement.
The government has now withdrawn exemptions to stocks of pulses held by these four categories, it added.
The ministry said that the Cabinet Secretary has also been reviewing the price situation on a daily basis. “He directed all departments to keep a close watch on prices of essential commodities, especially pulses and work in close coordination with all states to control price rise.”
“All states have been advised to intensify anti-hoarding operations and keep in check black-marketing and profiteering by traders,” it added.
The prices of pulses have risen unabated for the past few months due to a fall in domestic output by about 2 million tonnes (MT) to 17.20 MT in 2014-15 crop year (July-June) owing to deficient monsoon and unseasonal rains.