Four newly-elected MLCs of Bihar were administered oath of membership of Vidhan Parishad by its chairman Tarakant Jha on May 09,2011.
Jha administered the oath to JD(U)'s Mahachandra Prasad Singh and Awdesh Kumar Singh, BJP's Sanjeev Kumar Singh and Sanjeev Shayam Singh (Independent).
Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, several members of his council of ministers and other dignitories were presented at the swearing in function.The four MLCs were elected last month.
Members of the Vidhan Parishad
Total number of seats : 75
Members of the Bihar Legislative Council are as follows:
Shri Anuj Kumar Singh
Shri Ashok Kumar Agrawal
Prof. Aslam Azad
Shri Awdhesh Narayan Singh
Shri Badshah Prasad Azad
Shri Baidhnath Prasad
Shri Baleshwar Singh Bharti
Shri Balmiki Singh
Shri Barhamdev Narayan Singh
Shri Basudeo Singh
Dr. Bhim Singh
Shri Binod Kumar Singh
Shri Birkeshwar Prasad Singh
Shri Chandan Bagchi
Shri Devesh Chandra Thakur
Dr. Dilip Kumar Jaiswal
Shri Dinesh Prasad Singh
Shri Ganesh Bharti
Shri Ganga Parsad
Shri Giriraj Singh
Shri Prof. Gulam Gaus
Shri Harendra Pratap Panday
Shri Harun Rasid
Shri Hira Prasad Vind
Shri Hulas Pandey
Shri Md. Israil Raen
Dr. Smt. Jyoti
Shri Kameshwar Choupal
Shri Kedar Pandey
Smt Kiran Ghai Sinha
Shri Krishna Kumar Singh
Shri Mahachandra Prasad Singh
Shri Manoj Kumar Singh
Shri Manoj Yadav
Shri Md. Tanveer Hassan
Shri Mishrilal Yadav
Shri Narendra Prasad Singh
Shri Narendra Singh
Prof. Nawal Kishore Yadav
Shri Niraj Kumar
Shri Nitish Kumar
Shri Prem Kumar mani
Shri Rajendra Prasad Gupta
Shri Rajendra Rai
Shri Rajesh Kumar Singh (Raju Yadav)
Shri Rajesh Ram
Shri Rajnish Kumar
Shri Rajvanshi Singh
Prof. Ram Kishore Singh
Shri Ramashraya Prasad Singh
Shri Ramchandra Prasad
Shri Ramdhani Singh
Shri Ranjan Kumar Singh (Munna Singh)
Smt. Renu Singh
Smt. Roma Bharti
Shri Rudal Roy
Shri Salim Parwez
Shri Salman Ragheeb
Shri Sanjay Kumar Jha
Shri Sanjay Kumar Singh
Shri Sanjay Prasad
Shri Sanjay Singh
Shri Sanjeev Kumar Singh
Shri Sanjeev Shyam Singh
Shri Satish Kumar
Dr. Shambhu Sharan Shrivastav
Shri Shiv Prasann Yadav
Shri Sunil Kumar Singh
Shri Sushil Kumar Modi
Shri Tarakant Jha
Shri Uday Kant Chaudhry
Shri Uday Narayan Rai
Shri Upendra Prasad
Shri Vijay Kumar Verma
Shri Vinod Kumar Choudhry
BiharWatch-Journal of Justice, Jurisprudence and Law is an initiative of Jurists Association (JA), East India Research Council (EIRC), Centre for Economic History and Accountability (CEHA) and MediaVigil. It publishes research on diverse notions of justice and the performance of just and unjust formal and informal anthropocentric institutions and their design crisis with reference to the first principle. Editor:mediavigil@yahoo.co.in
Friday, May 13, 2011
Mamata, Jayalalithaa, Tarun Gogoi, Oomen Chandy & N Rangasamy Win Assembly Elections May 2011
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The Trinamool Congress bagged 184 seats in the assembly polls, its alliance partner Congress got 42 and the SUCI got 1 seat, in the 294-member assembly.
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Agriculture 'cabinet' for farm sector in Bihar
Note:Bihar's Agriculture 'cabinet' ought to take note of what the Prime Minister assured a delegation of farmers on 8, 2011 saying, "every year, before the budget, the government will bring out a report on the state of Indian agriculture". The delegation raised a number of issues, including remunerative prices for farm produce, amendment to the Land Acquisition Act, 4 per cent rate of interest for loans other than crop loan, effective implementation of the Minimum Support Price mechanism, due consideration of sensitivities about GM crops, protecting the interests of Indian farmers while engaging with WTO, FTA, etc., health insurance for farmers, ensuring farmers' interests while framing the Seed Bill and separate budget for agriculture.
These issues are relevant for Bihar as well because the state government has approved hazardous asbestos plants in Bihiya and Giddha in Bhojpur and at several other places like Madhubani, Champaran, Vaishali and Muzaffarpur instead of promoting farm based industries.
Prime Minister has announced that he will convene a joint meeting with the Finance Minister and the Agriculture Minister to have an in-depth discussion on the various issues raised. It would appropriate if a farmers delegation from Bihar is also present the meeting.
Gopal Krishna
Agriculture 'cabinet' for farm sector in Bihar
Bihar has become the first state in the country to constitute an agriculture 'cabinet' with an aim to improve the agrarian sector and address the plight of the farmers.
The new 'cabinet' is headed by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar and will have in it ministers of 18 departments including water resources, irrigation, energy, rural works, sugarcane industry, animal husbandry and disaster management.
'Agriculture sector is one way or another dependent on all these departments,' an official said.
The chief minister's agriculture advisor Mangal Rai, former director general Indian Council of Agriculture Research (ICAR), is a special invitee to this cabinet. The first meeting of the agriculture cabinet is to take place Tuesday.
'All these departments will work with a single goal to develop the agriculture sector,' the official said.
'It is not only a big news for the millions of farmers of Bihar, but beginning of turnaround for agriculture sector. This will help the state to achieve second green revolution,' state Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh told IANS.
Singh said the Bihar government has given highest priority to the agriculture sector and increased its budgetary allocation from Rs.25 crore to almost Rs.844 crore in 2011-12.
The news of a cabinet exclusively for the agriculture sector was cheered by the farmers.
'It appears that the Bihar government is turning its attention to agriculture sector,' Mahavir Mahto, a farmer near Patna, said.
In the last five years, Nitish Kumar has repeatedly said that he wants to have one or two agriculture product from the state on the plate of every Indian in the coming years.
The state government chalked out a roadmap for the agriculture sector in 2008.
'Several steps, including promotion of modern techniques of farming, organic farming, use of improved seeds among others, have been taken in last two-three years but it is still a long way to go in developing the agriculture sector,' an official of agriculture department said.
Atul Singh, an economist researcher in New Delhi-based Jawaharlal Nehru University, said that Bihar's agriculture growth instead of going up has shown declining trend.
'It is a hard fact revealed by the government's own economic survey,' Singh said.
According to the official data, against the national productivity average of 2 tonnes of rice per hectare, the state's rice productivity is about 1.5 tonnes per hectare.
In case of wheat, the state's productivity is 2.2 tonnes per hectare against the national average of 2.7 tonnes.
The state government holds repeated droughts and floods responsible for this poor production.
The state government admits on its official website that agriculture is the key to the overall development of the state economy.
Agriculture is the backbone of Bihar's economy, 81 percent of workforce, and generation of nearly 42 percent of the state domestic product, it says.
'Barring maize and pulses, productivity of various farm produce in Bihar is much below the national average. Though the area under cultivation is shrinking, there is tremendous scope for income generation, by improving productivity. Adverse climatic condition, like draught and floods, do play a role in decreasing products,' the official website says.
IANS
These issues are relevant for Bihar as well because the state government has approved hazardous asbestos plants in Bihiya and Giddha in Bhojpur and at several other places like Madhubani, Champaran, Vaishali and Muzaffarpur instead of promoting farm based industries.
Prime Minister has announced that he will convene a joint meeting with the Finance Minister and the Agriculture Minister to have an in-depth discussion on the various issues raised. It would appropriate if a farmers delegation from Bihar is also present the meeting.
Gopal Krishna
Agriculture 'cabinet' for farm sector in Bihar
Bihar has become the first state in the country to constitute an agriculture 'cabinet' with an aim to improve the agrarian sector and address the plight of the farmers.
The new 'cabinet' is headed by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar and will have in it ministers of 18 departments including water resources, irrigation, energy, rural works, sugarcane industry, animal husbandry and disaster management.
'Agriculture sector is one way or another dependent on all these departments,' an official said.
The chief minister's agriculture advisor Mangal Rai, former director general Indian Council of Agriculture Research (ICAR), is a special invitee to this cabinet. The first meeting of the agriculture cabinet is to take place Tuesday.
'All these departments will work with a single goal to develop the agriculture sector,' the official said.
'It is not only a big news for the millions of farmers of Bihar, but beginning of turnaround for agriculture sector. This will help the state to achieve second green revolution,' state Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh told IANS.
Singh said the Bihar government has given highest priority to the agriculture sector and increased its budgetary allocation from Rs.25 crore to almost Rs.844 crore in 2011-12.
The news of a cabinet exclusively for the agriculture sector was cheered by the farmers.
'It appears that the Bihar government is turning its attention to agriculture sector,' Mahavir Mahto, a farmer near Patna, said.
In the last five years, Nitish Kumar has repeatedly said that he wants to have one or two agriculture product from the state on the plate of every Indian in the coming years.
The state government chalked out a roadmap for the agriculture sector in 2008.
'Several steps, including promotion of modern techniques of farming, organic farming, use of improved seeds among others, have been taken in last two-three years but it is still a long way to go in developing the agriculture sector,' an official of agriculture department said.
Atul Singh, an economist researcher in New Delhi-based Jawaharlal Nehru University, said that Bihar's agriculture growth instead of going up has shown declining trend.
'It is a hard fact revealed by the government's own economic survey,' Singh said.
According to the official data, against the national productivity average of 2 tonnes of rice per hectare, the state's rice productivity is about 1.5 tonnes per hectare.
In case of wheat, the state's productivity is 2.2 tonnes per hectare against the national average of 2.7 tonnes.
The state government holds repeated droughts and floods responsible for this poor production.
The state government admits on its official website that agriculture is the key to the overall development of the state economy.
Agriculture is the backbone of Bihar's economy, 81 percent of workforce, and generation of nearly 42 percent of the state domestic product, it says.
'Barring maize and pulses, productivity of various farm produce in Bihar is much below the national average. Though the area under cultivation is shrinking, there is tremendous scope for income generation, by improving productivity. Adverse climatic condition, like draught and floods, do play a role in decreasing products,' the official website says.
IANS
Wednesday, April 27, 2011
सत्ता छोड़, सत्ता छोड़, सत्ता छोड़
सत्ता छोड़, सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ......
मंहगाई जी सत्ता छोड़ ,जम्हाई जी सत्ता छोड़
बतपुतली जी सत्ता छोड़ ,कठपुतली जी सत्ता छोड़
सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ .......I
लोभन सिंह जी सत्ता छोड़ ,परलोभन सिंह छोड़
भदमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़ ,पदमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़
सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ......I
कठमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़ ,भट्ठमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़
ठगमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़ ,हठमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़
सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ......
***पुष्पराज ***(भारत के गांवों से हजारों युवा सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ......का शोर करते हुए लाल किला की प्राचीर से किसी को खीच कर समंदर में फेंकने के लिए आगे निकाल चुके हें.ग्रामेर मानुष के के ग्रामगर्भ से यह स्वर उभर रहा है साथी .......)
मंहगाई जी सत्ता छोड़ ,जम्हाई जी सत्ता छोड़
बतपुतली जी सत्ता छोड़ ,कठपुतली जी सत्ता छोड़
सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ .......I
लोभन सिंह जी सत्ता छोड़ ,परलोभन सिंह छोड़
भदमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़ ,पदमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़
सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ......I
कठमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़ ,भट्ठमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़
ठगमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़ ,हठमोहन सिंह सत्ता छोड़
सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ......
***पुष्पराज ***(भारत के गांवों से हजारों युवा सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ,सत्ता छोड़ ......का शोर करते हुए लाल किला की प्राचीर से किसी को खीच कर समंदर में फेंकने के लिए आगे निकाल चुके हें.ग्रामेर मानुष के के ग्रामगर्भ से यह स्वर उभर रहा है साथी .......)
Friday, February 25, 2011
Round Table on 'Bihar Budget :Irrigation, Flood Control & Hydropower
Sir/Madam,
This is to invite you to a Round Table on 'Bihar Budget :Irrigation, Flood Control & Hydropower' on 28th February from 10 AM -5 PM at Gandhi Sanghrahalaya, Patna. There will be an attempt to discuss the Budget in the backdrop of two of K N Lal's reports, Nilendu Sanyal report, S C Jha Committee report, the recent book on Bagmati by Dr D K Mishra and the much awaited report of Justice Rajesh Balia headed Kosi Inquiry Commission. The Round Table is organised by Barh Mukti Abhiyan. The Budget Speech & Budget is available here: http://finance.bih.nic.in/
Please confirm your presence at the earliest to facilitate arrangements.
regards
gopal krishna
Mb: 09818089660, 07739308480
--
This is to invite you to a Round Table on 'Bihar Budget :Irrigation, Flood Control & Hydropower' on 28th February from 10 AM -5 PM at Gandhi Sanghrahalaya, Patna. There will be an attempt to discuss the Budget in the backdrop of two of K N Lal's reports, Nilendu Sanyal report, S C Jha Committee report, the recent book on Bagmati by Dr D K Mishra and the much awaited report of Justice Rajesh Balia headed Kosi Inquiry Commission. The Round Table is organised by Barh Mukti Abhiyan. The Budget Speech & Budget is available here: http://finance.bih.nic.in/
Please confirm your presence at the earliest to facilitate arrangements.
regards
gopal krishna
Mb: 09818089660, 07739308480
--
Blinded by profit, Bihar plans to open 12 asbestos factories
Lives of poor come cheap
Anuradha Dutt
Blinded by profit, Bihar plans to open 12 asbestos factories
For policy-makers, industrial development, sometimes, entails jeopardising the health of citizens, who lack a voice and recourse to remedial action. The plan to set up 12 asbestos factories in Bihar falls in this category. Muzaffarpur, Bhojpur, Vaishali, Champaran and Madhubani are the sites for the plants, which will produce asbestos sheets and the like, using raw material imported from countries such as Canada, Russia, Kazakhastan and China. The health hazards posed by asbestos are widely known, with some types of cancer, among other maladies, being ascribed to the effects of the fibre, used to make roofs and walls in dwellings of the poor. But then, to recall a well-tested adage, the lives of the poor come cheap for those at the helm of power.
India is among the countries that have chosen to ignore warnings issued in this regard by World Health Organisation and International Labour Organisation, and allowed use of asbestos products even if mining was gradually phased out since 1989 under growing international pressure. Opponents are worried about concerted lobbying by the rich and powerful asbestos industry, here and abroad, to persuade the Indian Government to lift the ban on mining, and promote the use of the fibre. They are especially concerned that Canada, which is trying hard to revive its asbestos industry, has been focussing on India as a huge potential market and business ally. And local industrial collaborators, with many reported to be close to the Congress-led UPA Government at the Centre, have also been pushing for lifting the mining ban and encouraging use of the fibre.
Ban Asbestos Network of India, an alliance of civil society groups, which has been trying to highlight the issue and help other rights bodies mobilise people in Bihar against the setting up of the plants in their State, condemns Canada’s duplicity. For, while seeking markets in India and other emerging economies, it has adopted a no home-use policy even as it decontaminates buildings. A memorandum of understanding was signed on December 31, 2010, between the Board of Trade of Metropolitan Montreal and the Indian Merchants’ Chamber on the supposedly safe use of asbestos. This occurred just before a trade mission to India. The Indian Supreme Court, which is hearing a PIL to ban asbestos completely, has taken note of the fact that Canada strictly regulates the use of asbestos under its Hazardous Products Act and the Environmental Protection Act, but produced 1,80,000 tonnes of the mineral in 2009. An estimated 96 per cent was exported, according to the US Geological Survey. India constitutes a primary market.
It is not as if policy-makers here are unaware of the dangers posed by the fibre. As far back as the late 1960s, they took note of the fact. After 30 workers from Roro mines in Chaibasa, West Singhbhum district — in Jharkhand now — died of asbestosis. P Mazumdar, a trade union leader, campaigned for occupational health rights. The late Indrajit Gupta, CPI MP, raised the issue in Parliament. Opponents continued to draw attention to the dangers posed by asbestos and pushed for using safe alternatives, but industry lobbyists ensured that the ban on mining was not extended to the use of this fibre. Profit over principles is another well-tested adage. This explains India’s ambivalence with regard to trade in asbestos. Mining is banned but import, manufacture and use of products is permitted. A People’s Union for Civil Liberties report on the Bihar plants calls for an immediate halt to the work at all the sites, while stating that “Bihar cannot be made the dumping ground of hazardous production, exposing the people here to all kinds of risks because they are poor”.
And that is the crux of the matter, with free trade, under the guise of economic liberalisation, being deliberately construed by commercial buccaneers and political underlings as license to ride roughshod over health concerns, human rights, land ownership issues and environmental imperatives. In the present instance, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar is reported to have deflected blame on the Union Government for having approved the setting-up of the factories. In the wake of a six-month long campaign against the setting-up of a plant in Muzaffarpur’s Chainpur-Bishunpur area, Mr Nitish Kumar attempted to clarify his Government’s stand on the issue at a Press conference in New Delhi on February 2. He claimed not to have granted permission, and pressed for suspending asbestos factories throughout India. He rued the absence of a uniform policy in this regard.
According to BANI, clearance for the project has been granted by the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests, State Pollution Control Board, State Investment Promotion Board and the State Industry Board. However, since health is a State subject, the Government of Bihar can certainly spike the plan. Opponents feel that industrial lobbies are at work to ensure that the project is not scrapped. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court wants Parliament to bring in a suitable law. The White Asbestos (Ban on Use and Import) Bill is pending since 2009, and opponents are hoping that it will be taken up and the ban on the asbestos trade made legally binding.
February 26, 2011
The Pioneer
Anuradha Dutt
Blinded by profit, Bihar plans to open 12 asbestos factories
For policy-makers, industrial development, sometimes, entails jeopardising the health of citizens, who lack a voice and recourse to remedial action. The plan to set up 12 asbestos factories in Bihar falls in this category. Muzaffarpur, Bhojpur, Vaishali, Champaran and Madhubani are the sites for the plants, which will produce asbestos sheets and the like, using raw material imported from countries such as Canada, Russia, Kazakhastan and China. The health hazards posed by asbestos are widely known, with some types of cancer, among other maladies, being ascribed to the effects of the fibre, used to make roofs and walls in dwellings of the poor. But then, to recall a well-tested adage, the lives of the poor come cheap for those at the helm of power.
India is among the countries that have chosen to ignore warnings issued in this regard by World Health Organisation and International Labour Organisation, and allowed use of asbestos products even if mining was gradually phased out since 1989 under growing international pressure. Opponents are worried about concerted lobbying by the rich and powerful asbestos industry, here and abroad, to persuade the Indian Government to lift the ban on mining, and promote the use of the fibre. They are especially concerned that Canada, which is trying hard to revive its asbestos industry, has been focussing on India as a huge potential market and business ally. And local industrial collaborators, with many reported to be close to the Congress-led UPA Government at the Centre, have also been pushing for lifting the mining ban and encouraging use of the fibre.
Ban Asbestos Network of India, an alliance of civil society groups, which has been trying to highlight the issue and help other rights bodies mobilise people in Bihar against the setting up of the plants in their State, condemns Canada’s duplicity. For, while seeking markets in India and other emerging economies, it has adopted a no home-use policy even as it decontaminates buildings. A memorandum of understanding was signed on December 31, 2010, between the Board of Trade of Metropolitan Montreal and the Indian Merchants’ Chamber on the supposedly safe use of asbestos. This occurred just before a trade mission to India. The Indian Supreme Court, which is hearing a PIL to ban asbestos completely, has taken note of the fact that Canada strictly regulates the use of asbestos under its Hazardous Products Act and the Environmental Protection Act, but produced 1,80,000 tonnes of the mineral in 2009. An estimated 96 per cent was exported, according to the US Geological Survey. India constitutes a primary market.
It is not as if policy-makers here are unaware of the dangers posed by the fibre. As far back as the late 1960s, they took note of the fact. After 30 workers from Roro mines in Chaibasa, West Singhbhum district — in Jharkhand now — died of asbestosis. P Mazumdar, a trade union leader, campaigned for occupational health rights. The late Indrajit Gupta, CPI MP, raised the issue in Parliament. Opponents continued to draw attention to the dangers posed by asbestos and pushed for using safe alternatives, but industry lobbyists ensured that the ban on mining was not extended to the use of this fibre. Profit over principles is another well-tested adage. This explains India’s ambivalence with regard to trade in asbestos. Mining is banned but import, manufacture and use of products is permitted. A People’s Union for Civil Liberties report on the Bihar plants calls for an immediate halt to the work at all the sites, while stating that “Bihar cannot be made the dumping ground of hazardous production, exposing the people here to all kinds of risks because they are poor”.
And that is the crux of the matter, with free trade, under the guise of economic liberalisation, being deliberately construed by commercial buccaneers and political underlings as license to ride roughshod over health concerns, human rights, land ownership issues and environmental imperatives. In the present instance, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar is reported to have deflected blame on the Union Government for having approved the setting-up of the factories. In the wake of a six-month long campaign against the setting-up of a plant in Muzaffarpur’s Chainpur-Bishunpur area, Mr Nitish Kumar attempted to clarify his Government’s stand on the issue at a Press conference in New Delhi on February 2. He claimed not to have granted permission, and pressed for suspending asbestos factories throughout India. He rued the absence of a uniform policy in this regard.
According to BANI, clearance for the project has been granted by the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests, State Pollution Control Board, State Investment Promotion Board and the State Industry Board. However, since health is a State subject, the Government of Bihar can certainly spike the plan. Opponents feel that industrial lobbies are at work to ensure that the project is not scrapped. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court wants Parliament to bring in a suitable law. The White Asbestos (Ban on Use and Import) Bill is pending since 2009, and opponents are hoping that it will be taken up and the ban on the asbestos trade made legally binding.
February 26, 2011
The Pioneer
Thursday, February 3, 2011
एस्बेस्टेस कारखाने पर नीतीश कुमार
एस्बेस्टेस कारखाने को लेकर SIPB का प्रस्ताव हमारे पास आया है, लेकिन हमने उसे मंज़ूरी नहीं दी है। उस प्रस्ताव को भारत सरकार और पर्यावरण मंत्रालय की अनुमती मिल गई है। राज्य में इस पर बहस भी हो रही है और विरोध भी। लेकिन हमारी मंज़ूरी नहीं मिली है। कोई अपनी ज़मीन पर क्या निर्माण कार्य कर रहा है, उसका हम कुछ नहीं कर सकते।
पुलिस तैनाती पर नीतीश कुमार ने कहा कि ------ पुलिस वाले अब कहीं नहीं जाएगें, मामले पर ठीक से सोच समझ कर फैसला लेने की ज़रुरत है।
देश में कई जगहों पर एस्बेस्टस फैक्ट्री है, राज्य से बाहर भी कारखाने लगा रहे हैं, यहां भी लगा रहे हैं।
एस्बेस्टस फैक्ट्री को राज्य प्रदूषण बोर्ड ने भी अनुमती दे दी, हमारे पास मामला तब आता है जब निवेश मामलों को लेकर रिआयतों की ज़रुरत होती है। इस पर राज्य में कोई प्रतिबंध नहीं है।
राज्य में एस्बेस्टेस कारखाने का मुद्दा विवादित है, हम इस मामले पर कोई समर्थन नहीं कर रहे हैं।
अगर एस्बेस्टेस की फैक्ट्री नहीं लगनी चाहिए तो पूरे देश में नहीं लगनी चाहिए। इस मसले को लेकर एक राष्ट्रीय नीति
बननी चाहिए।
Statement of Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar at a press conference in New Delhi at Indian Women Press Corps on the issue of bitter protest against proposed asbestos plant in Muzaffarpur, Bihar on 2 February 2011.
पुलिस तैनाती पर नीतीश कुमार ने कहा कि ------ पुलिस वाले अब कहीं नहीं जाएगें, मामले पर ठीक से सोच समझ कर फैसला लेने की ज़रुरत है।
देश में कई जगहों पर एस्बेस्टस फैक्ट्री है, राज्य से बाहर भी कारखाने लगा रहे हैं, यहां भी लगा रहे हैं।
एस्बेस्टस फैक्ट्री को राज्य प्रदूषण बोर्ड ने भी अनुमती दे दी, हमारे पास मामला तब आता है जब निवेश मामलों को लेकर रिआयतों की ज़रुरत होती है। इस पर राज्य में कोई प्रतिबंध नहीं है।
राज्य में एस्बेस्टेस कारखाने का मुद्दा विवादित है, हम इस मामले पर कोई समर्थन नहीं कर रहे हैं।
अगर एस्बेस्टेस की फैक्ट्री नहीं लगनी चाहिए तो पूरे देश में नहीं लगनी चाहिए। इस मसले को लेकर एक राष्ट्रीय नीति
बननी चाहिए।
Statement of Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar at a press conference in New Delhi at Indian Women Press Corps on the issue of bitter protest against proposed asbestos plant in Muzaffarpur, Bihar on 2 February 2011.
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