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Wednesday, 16 January 2019

National Youth Parliament 2019 ( Source PIB)




News

  • Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports has launched the National Youth Parliament Festival 2019 beginning the celebration of the National Youth Day 2019.
National Youth Parliament
  1. Aim: To provide a chance to the youth to brainstorm about new India and to find ways and chalk out plans to realize our resolves before 2022.
  2. The Ministry has proposed to take the Youth Festival to each district of the country and celebrate it as the “National Youth Parliament Festival”.
  3. Organising District Youth Parliaments and taking the festival to the doorsteps of the youth would provide an opportunity to large number of youth of this country to participate.
  4. National Youth Parliament Festival 2019 is organised on the theme of “Be The Voice of New India” and “Find solutions and contribute to policy”.
  5. Youth in the age bracket of 18-25 years are invited to participate in the District Youth Parliaments.
National Youth Parliament Festival 2019
  1. It will be conducted at three levels:
  • District Youth Parliament (DYP) at the district level. The participants for DYP would be selected through two screening processes i.e. Digital and Walk-in screenings in Nodal Institution in each district.
  • State Youth Parliament (SYP) at the State Level.
  • National Youth Parliament (NYP) at the National Level.
  1. A maximum of 50 best speakers from the Digital screening and 50 best speakers from Walk-in process, shortlisted by the Screening Committee in each district, will participate in the DYPs.
  2. The best three speakers selected by a Jury from each District Youth Parliament will participate at the State Youth Parliament.
  3. Similarly, the two best speakers selected from each State Youth Parliament will participate as speakers in the National Youth Parliament.
  4. The highest scorer from each District in the District Youth Parliament (DYP) will participate in the National Youth Parliament (NYP) as a delegate.
  5. The best three speakers at the National Youth Parliament will be awarded Rs. 2 Lakhs, Rs. 1.50 Lakhs and Rs. 1 Lakh respectively by the Prime Minister.
Why such move?
  1. This is done in order to hear the voice of youth in this age bracket who are allowed to vote but cannot contest in elections.
  2. It will also encourage the youth to engage with public issues, understand the common man’s point of view, form their opinion and express these in an articulate manner.
  3. Relevant and effective voices on the vision of New India would be captured and documented to make these available to policy makers and implementors to take it forward.







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Sunday, 13 January 2019

Sikkim will be the first state to roll out Universal Basic Income (UBI) by 2022



  • Sikkim will be the first state to roll out Universal Basic Income (UBI) by 2022 and has started the process to introduce the unconditional direct cash transfer scheme.
Background
Background
  1. The 2017 Economic Survey had flagged the UBI scheme as a conceptually appealing idea and a possible alternative to social welfare programmes targeted at reducing poverty.
  2. It has been tested even in India, debated within the Finance Ministry as early as 2017.
  3. It has been tried in Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh and tribal belts with fairly large samples and it has shown it works.
What is UBI?
  1. A UBI would mean every single individual, regardless of their identity or economic status, is guaranteed a monthly income, transferred directly into their bank account by the government every month.
  2. It has three key components: universality, unconditionality and agency – the last condition as a way to give people a choice in how to spend the transferred money.
How will it be financed?
  1. The successful implementation of the hydropower projects by Sikkim has made it a surplus power generating state.
  2. The state produces 2200 MW and it will go up to 3000 MW in the next few years.
  3. The state’s requirement is only 200-300 MW and the rest goes to power trading firms.
  4. This money will be utilized by UTI and it will be for everyone and every household.
  5. The idea is to subsume other subsidies and allowances in order to provide a particular amount every month to people.
Feasibility Check
  1. Sikkim has a literacy rate of 98 per cent and its monthly per capita expenditure in rural areas is Rs 1,444.06 and it is Rs Rs 2,538.11 for urban areas.
  2. The BPL percentage has come down from 41.43% in 1994 to 8.19% in 2011-12.
  3. The state will also restructure some social schemes and the “skewed” tax structure to find more resources.
  4. With tourism being another source of revenue for the state – the state gets around 2.5 million tourists a year –there could be some cess in future to generate additional resource to implement the scheme.
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Friday, 11 January 2019

All about DNA technology Bill



DNA Technology Bill 

  • The Bill that provides for regulation of use and application of DNA technology for establishing the identity of certain categories of persons, including offenders, victims, suspects and undertrials, was passed in Lok Sabha.
What it aims to bring?
  1. The use of DNA data is also likely to be useful in quickly identifying missing persons and resolving criminal cases in which repeat offenders might be involved.
  2. This includes offences under the IPC, 1860, as well as offences under other laws such as the Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, 1956, the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971, the Protection of Civil Rights Act, 1955, and the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988.
DNA Technology (Use and Application) Regulation Bill, 2018 
  1. The primary intended purpose for enactment of the bill is for expanding the application of DNA-based forensic technologies to support and strengthen the justice delivery system of the country.
  2. The utility of DNA based technologies for solving crimes, and to identify missing persons, is well recognized across the world.
  3. Other aims include Speedier justice delivery and Increased conviction rate.
  4. Bill’s provisions will enable the cross-matching between persons reported missing and unidentified dead bodies found in various parts of the country, and also for establishing the identity of victims in mass disasters.
  5. By providing for the mandatory accreditation and regulation of DNA laboratories, the Bill seeks to ensure the data remain protected from misuse or abuse in terms of the privacy rights of our citizens.
  6. The Bill has two major components : the DNA databanks and the DNA Regulatory Board.
DNA databanks
  1. There will be two kinds of databanks: a national one and multiple regional ones.
  2. Every databank will maintain DNA data in one of the following categories: the crime scene index, the suspects’ or undertrials’ index, the offenders’ index, the missing persons’ index and an ‘unknown’ deceased persons’ index.
DNA Regulatory Board
  1. The Regulatory Board will comprise 12 members.
  2. Some of them will be experts in the field of biological sciences, whereas the others will be the director-general of the NIA, the directors of the CBI, the heads of the Centre for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics and the Central Forensic Science Laboratory, and a member of the NHRC.
  3. The principal responsibility of the Board will be to accredit DNA-testing labs from which data can be collected for the databank and ensure they maintain high quality standards at all times.
  4. But in light of recent privacy and surveillance issues, the Board’s responsibility towards ensuring the DNA data is stored securely, used properly and only for identification purposes will also be under close watch.

Criticisms

Matter of Consent
  1. Written consent is required from everyone for their DNA samples to be collected, processed and included in the database except from those who have committed crimes with punishment of 7+ years or death.
  2. However, a similarly specific instruction is missing for the collection of DNA samples for civil matters. Such matters include parentage disputes, emigration or immigration and transplantation of human organs.
  3. The Bill also doesn’t state that the consent has to be voluntary.
Civil Disputes
  1. Second, it’s not clear if DNA samples collected to resolve civil disputes will also be stored in the databank (regional or national), although there is no index specific for the same.
  2. If they will be stored, then the problem cascades because the Bill also does not provide for information, consent and appeals.
  3. If a person’s DNA data has entered the databank, there is no process specified by which they can have it removed.
  4. All of these issues together could violate the right to privacy.
Authenticity of DNA Labs
  1. Third, there’s also the question of whether the DNA labs accredited by the Regulatory Board are allowed to store copies of the samples they analyse.
  2. And if so, how the owners of those samples can ensure the data is safe or needs to be removed from their own indices.
  3. It’s unclear if the Regulatory Board will oversee other tests performed at the accredited labs.
  4. This could become necessary because, unlike one’s biometric data or PAN number, the human genome contains lots of information about every individual.
Overreaching access to identity
  1. So a test undertaken to ascertain a person’s identity by analysing her DNA will in the process also reveal a lot of other things about that person, including information about their ancestry, diseases to which they are susceptible, etc. – i.e. information that the individual has a right to keep private.
  2. The Bill does not specify which parts of an individual’s DNA can be analysed to ascertain their identity.
  3. The more parts are subjected to analysis, the more conclusively a person’s identity can be established.
  4. But this can’t be used as a license to parse more than is necessary, because then the DNA lab is also likely to reveal more information than it has the right to seek.

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Friday, 4 January 2019

Some facts of constutional assembly of India





FIRST DAY IN THE CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY
The Constituent Assembly met for the first time in New Delhi on 9 December, 1946 in the Constitution Hall which is now known as the Central Hall of Parliament House. Decorated elegantly for the occasion, the Chamber wore a new look on that day with a constellation of bright lamps hanging from the high ceilings and also from the brackets on its walls.
Overwhelmed and jubilant as they were, the hon'ble members sat in semi-circular rows facing the Presidential dias. The desks which could be warmed electrically were placed on sloping green-carpeted terraces. Those who adorned the front row were Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, Acharya J.B. Kripalani, Dr. Rajendra Prasad, Smt. Sarojini Naidu, Shri Hare-Krushna Mahatab, Pandit Govind Ballabh Pant, Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, Shri Sarat Chandra Bose, Shri C. Rajagopalachari and Shri M. Asaf Ali. Two hundred and seven representatives, including nine women were present.
The inaugural session began at 11 a.m. with the introduction of Dr. Sachchidananda Sinha, the temporary Chairman of the Assembly, by Acharya Kripalani. While welcoming Dr. Sinha and others, Acharyaji said: "As we begin every work with Divine blessings, we request Dr. Sinha to invoke these blessings so that our work may proceed smoothly. Now, I once more, on your behalf, call upon Dr. Sinha to take the Chair."
Occupying the Chair amidst acclamation, Dr. Sinha read out the goodwill messages received from different countries. After the Chairman's inaugural address and the nomination of a Deputy Chairman, the members were formally requested to present their credentials. The First Day's proceedings ended after all the 207 members present submitted their credentials and signed the Register.
Seated in the galleries, some thirty feet above the floor of the Chamber, the representatives of the Press and the visitors witnessed this memorable event. The All India Radio, Delhi broadcast a composite sound picture of the entire proceedings.
SOME FACTS
The Constituent Assembly took almost three years (two years, eleven months and seventeen days to be precise) to complete its historic task of drafting the Constitution for Independent India. During this period, it held eleven sessions covering a total of 165 days. Of these, 114 days were spent on the consideration of the Draft Constitution.
As to its composition, members were chosen by indirect election by the members of the Provincial Legislative Assemblies, according to the scheme recommended by the Cabinet Mission. The arrangement was: (i) 292 members were elected through the Provincial Legislative Assemblies; (ii) 93 members represented the Indian Princely States; and (iii) 4 members represented the Chief Commissioners' Provinces. The total membership of the Assembly thus was to be 389. However, as a result of the partition under the Mountbatten Plan of 3 June, 1947, a separate Constituent Assembly was set up for Pakistan and representatives of some Provinces ceased to be members of the Assembly. As a result, the membership of the Assembly was reduced to 299.
On 13 December, 1946, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru moved the Objectives Resolution
1.This Constituent Assembly declares its firm and solemn resolve to proclaim India as an Independent Soverign Republic and to draw up for her future governance a Constitution;
2.WHEREIN the territories that now comprise British India, the territories that now form the Indian States, and such other parts fo India as are outside British India and the States as well as such other territories as are willing to be constituted into the Independent Soverign India, shall be a Union of them all; and
3.WHEREIN the said territories, whether with their present boundaries or with such others as may be determined by the Constituent Assembly and thereafter according to the law of the Constitution, shall possess and retain the status of autonomous Units, together with residuary powers and exercise all powers and functions of goverrnment and administration, save and except such powers and functions as are vested in or assigned to the Union, or as are inherent or implied in the Union or resulting therefrom; and
4.WHEREIN all power and authority of the Soverign Independent India, its constituent parts and organs of government, are derived from the people; and
5.WHEREIN shall be guaranteed and secured to all the people of India justice, social economic and political : equality of status, of opportunity, and before the law; freedom of thought, expression, belief, faith, worship, vocation, association and action, subject to law and public morality; and
6.WHEREIN adequate safeguards shall be provided for minorities, backward and tribal areas, and depressed and other backward classes; and
7.WHEREBY shall be maintained the integrity of the territory of the Republic and its soverign rights on land, sea, and air according to justice and the law of civilized nations; and
8.this ancient land attains its righful and honoured placed in the world and make its full and willing contribution to the promotion of world peace and the welfare of mankind.
This Resolution was unanimously adopted by the Constituent Assembly on 22 January 1947.
Late in the evening of 14 August, 1947 the Assembly met in the Constitution Hall and at the stroke of midnight, took over as the Legislative Assembly of an Independent India.
On 29 August, 1947, the Constituent Assembly set up a Drafting Committee under the Chairmanship of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar to prepare a Draft Constitution for India. While deliberating upon the draft Constitution, the Assembly moved, discussed and disposed of as many as 2,473 amendments out of a total of 7,635 tabled.
The Constitution of India was adopted on 26 November, 1949 and the hon'ble members appended their signatures to it on 24 January, 1950. In all, 284 members actually signed the Constitution. On that day when the Constitution was being signed, it was drizzling outside and it was interpreted as a sign of a good omen.
The Constitution of India came into force on 2 6 January, 1950. On that day, the Assembly ceased to exist, transforming itself into the Provisional Parliament of India until a new Parliament was constituted in1952
Sessions of the Constituent Assembly
First Session:9-23 December, 1946
Second Session:20-25 January, 1947
Third Session:28 April - 2 May, 1947
Fourth Session:14-31 July, 1947
Fifth Session:14-30 August, 1947
Sixth Session:27 January, 1948
Seventh Session:4 November,1948 - 8 January, 1949
Eighth Session:16 May - 16 June, 1949
Ninth Session:30 July - 18 September, 1949
Tenth Session:6-17 October, 1949
Eleventh Session:14-26 November, 1949
    [The Assembly met once again on 24 January, 1950, when the members appended their signatures to the Constitution of India]
    IMPORTANT COMMITTEES OF THE CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY AND THEIR CHAIRMEN
    Name of the Committee

    Chairman
    Committee on the Rules of ProcedureRajendra Prasad
    Steering CommitteeRajendra Prasad
    Finance and Staff CommitteeRajendra Prasad
    Credential CommitteeAlladi Krishnaswami Ayyar
    House CommitteeB. Pattabhi Sitaramayya
    Order of Business CommitteeK.M. Munsi
    Ad hoc Committee on the National FlagRajendra Prasad
    Committee on the Functions of the Constituent AssemblyG.V. Mavalankar
    States CommitteeJawaharlal Nehru
    Advisory Committee on Fundamental Rights, Minorities and Tribal and Excluded AreasVallabhbhai Patel
    Minorities Sub-CommitteeH.C. Mookherjee
    Fundamental Rights Sub-CommitteeJ.B. Kripalani
    North-East Frontier Tribal Areas and Assam Exluded & Partially Excluded Areas Sub-CommitteeGopinath Bardoloi
    Excluded and Partially Excluded Areas (Other than those in Assam) Sub-CommitteeA.V. Thakkar
    Union Powers CommitteeJawaharlal Nehru
    Union Constitution CommitteeJawaharlal Nehru
    Drafting CommitteeB.R. Ambedkar
    STATEWISE MEMBERSHIP OF THE CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY OF INDIA AS ON 31 DECEMBER, 1947
    PROVINCES-229
    S.No
    StateNo. of Members
    1.Madras49
    2.Bombay21
    3.West Bengal19
    4.United Provinces55
    5.East Punjab12
    6.Bihar36
    7.C.P. and Berar17
    8.Assam8
    9.Orissa9
    10.Delhi1
    11.Ajmer-Merwara1
    12.Coorg1
    INDIAN STATES-70
    1.Alwar1
    2.Baroda3
    3.Bhopal1
    4.Bikaner1
    5.Cochin1
    6.Gwalior4
    7.Indore1
    8.Jaipur3
    9.Jodhpur2
    10.Kolhapur1
    11.Kotah1
    12.Mayurbhanj1
    13.Mysore7
    14.Patiala2
    15.Rewa2
    16.Travancore6
    17.Udaipur2
    18.Sikkim and Cooch Behar Group1
    19.Tripura, Manipur and Khasi States Group1
    20.U.P. States Group1
    21.Eastern Rajputana States Group3
    22.Central India States Group (including Bundelkhand and Malwa)3
    23.Western India States Group4
    24.Gujarat States Group2
    25.Deccan and Madras States Group2
    26.Punjab States Group I3
    27.Eastern States Group I4
    28.Eastern States Group II3
    29Residuary States Group4
     
    Total

    299
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