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Center planning vision document for North-East
The Centre is planning a
vision document for the development of North-Eastern states of the country.
The vision document for 2020 will be finalised by January, 2007, following
which plans will be prepared for the development of the region. Inaugurating
a meeting of the North-Eastern Council here today, Union Minister for
Development of North-Eastern Region Mani Shankar Aiyar announced that
periodical reviews of various infrastructural projects earmarked for the
region would also be taken up from the next month onwards to ensure timely
implementation. He expressed concern over the shortfall of expenditure
earmarked for various Central ministries and said timely submission of
proposals and projects had to be ensured for full utilisation of funds. The
construction of new roads to provide connectivity even to the remotest
village in the region is on also part of the roadmap of developing the
region.
Foreign
policy to get boost
External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee
said that in the coming decade, India’s foreign policy would witness
intensified engagements with not only the major powers, but also emerging
power centres as well as immediate and extended neighbourhood. He was
addressing the participants of the 46th NDC Course on “Indian Foreign
Policy: A Road Map for the Decade Ahead” at National Defence. Mr Mukherjee
said demographic trends, policy choices and India’s inherent societal
strengths had come together to put the country among the key players of this
century.
NHRC pulls up Chief Secy for
infants’ death
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC)
has asked the West Bengal Chief Secretary to comment on the death of 17
infants in a noth Kolkata hospital. Taking suo motu cognisance of a report
appeared in a national daily, the commission has directed that a copy of the
press report should be sent to the Chief Secretary concerned and his
comments be sent to the commission within four weeks. The news report had
drawn attention to lack of infrastructure and proper care in B.C. Roy
Children Hospital, the lone paediatrics referral centre in the state.
According to the Medical Superintendent of the hospital, the deaths took
place in the neo-natal ward. He said the newborns were underweight and died
due to septicemia. According to the news report, some doctors at the
hospital tried to pass off the deaths as a mere co-incidence. The
commission, however, said these deaths were grim reminder of a similar
tragedy in the hospital in the past
CPM against death to Saddam
Members of the Chennai South District unit
of the CPM on Sunday staged a demonstration here in protest against the
death sentence awarded to former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein by a
'US-backed' trial court in Iraq.
Forest Tribal Rights Bill
Decks have been cleared for the passage of a bill for recognition of forest
rights of scheduled tribes with a Group of Ministers (GoM) on Tribal Affairs
managing a consensus on certain contentious issues, including a cut-off date
for providing rights to tribals.
Blair seeks help from Iran,
Syria
Tony Blair has urged George Bush to make a
dramatic U-turn by drawing Iran and Syria into efforts to bring stability to
Iraq and forge a long-term peace in the wider Middle East. The Prime
Minister joined a clamour in Washington for the US President to drop his
hardline approach towards what he regards as two rogue states. In his annual
foreign affairs speech to the Lord Mayor's Banquet, Mr Blair offered Iran a
"clear strategic choice" - a partnership if it stops supporting terrorism in
Lebanon and Iraq and accept its international obligations, or isolation if
it does not. His advisers said the same choice applied to Syria. Mr Blair's
spokesman denied his call meant a softening of British policy - London has
always been keener than Washington on dialogue with Tehran and Damascus -
and said it would not involve concessions to the two nations. But he added
that this was a "moment when people are rethinking policy, and the time to
articulate a way forward".
Shots fired at Bangla EC’s
residence
Bangladesh Election Commissioner Mahmud
Hasan Mansur's residence in the city came under several rounds of gunshots
early today, but no one was purportedly hurt. The police said gunmen fired
five rounds from shotguns that struck the sentry box and the wall of his
residence at Mohammadpur at about 0530 hours local time. The Awami
League-led 14-party alliance of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, has
been demanding resignation of Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Justice Aziz
and three Election Commissioners for holding free and fair elections.
Despite the widespread demand, the CEC and his colleagues have refused to
demit office. Meanwhile, the country’s seaports reopened today and traffic
streamed back on highways after the 14-party alliance temporarily lifted a
transport blockade aimed at forcing the removal of the controversial
election officials
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