Odisha has reserved 50 per cent seats for women in panchayats, and the state government wholeheartedly supports reservation of women in policy-making bodies, he said.
Tag: Naveen Patnaik
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Caste census chorus by Nitish, Naveen & Soren
Express News Service
PATNA/NEW DELHI: Despite the Centre recently ruling out caste census in 2021 in its affidavit before the Supreme Court, Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar on Sunday pressed ahead saying it was the need of the hour and served national interest. Similar demands came from chief ministers of Jharkhand and Odisha during Sunday’s meeting in Delhi with Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Left-wing extremism.
Nitish KumarWhile Jharkhand Chief Minister Hemant Soren submitted a memorandum in support of caste-based census, Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik said his government would do whatever is sensible to reduce discrimination in his state.
Addressing media after the Delhi meeting, Nitish said enumeration of castes was key to effective implementation of welfare schemes and “it would not be proper if it is not conducted”. Nitish said he would convene an all-party meeting in Bihar to discuss the situation and chart the future course.
While Nitish said he does not see any point in leaving the NDA over this issue, his statement put the Bihar BJP in a tight spot as it has been advised by its leadership to expose the parties demanding caste census. Three of the four NDA constituents — JD(U), HAM and VIP — have broken ranks and are supporting the Opposition on the issue.
Predictably, former deputy chief minister of Bihar Sushil Kumar Modi defended the Centre’s line, saying caste-based census was difficult as it was not ‘just a matter of adding a column’. “But if any state wants to conduct it, it can go ahead and do it like Karnataka had done earlier or like Odisha is doing now,” Modi said. “If the Bihar NDA wants to conduct the survey, it can do it. But it is not practically possible for the Centre to conduct it now,” he added.
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Amit Shah urges CMs to give priority to end Naxal menace; seeks joint action to choke flow of funds
By PTI
NEW DELHI: Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Sunday urged the chief ministers of Naxal-affected states to give priority to addressing the menace so that it can be eradicated within a year and sought a joint strategy to choke the flow of funds to the red ultras.
Addressing chief ministers, state ministers and top officials of 10 Naxal-hit states, Shah also said that the fight against the Maoists has now reached its final phase and it needs to be accelerated and made decisive, an official statement said.
He said the death toll due to the Left Wing Extremism (LWE) violence has come down to 200 in a year.
The chief ministers who attended the meeting were Naveen Patnaik (Odisha), K Chandrashekar Rao (Telangana), Nitish Kumar (Bihar), Shivraj Singh Chouhan (Madhya Pradesh), Uddhav Thackeray (Maharashtra) and Hemant Soren (Jharkhand).
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, Bhupesh Baghel of Chhattisgarh, Y S Jagan Mohan Reddy of Andhra Pradesh and Kerala CM Pinarayi Vijayan did not attend the meeting.
Their states were represented by either a minister or senior officials.
The home minister urged all the chief ministers to give priority to the problem of Maoists, also called Left Wing Extremism, for the next one year so that a permanent solution can be found to the problem.
It requires building pressure, increasing speed and better coordination, he said.
Shah said it is very important to neutralise the sources of income of the Naxals.
The agencies of the central and the state governments should try to stop this by making a system together, he said.
According to sources, intensifying operations against the Naxals, action against their frontal organisations, filling up the security vacuum, choking the flow of funds to extremists and concerted action by the Enforcement Directorate, the National Investigation Agency and the state police were some of the issues discussed threadbare at the meeting.
Shah said the state administrations should be proactive and move ahead in coordination with the central forces.
If a regular review is conducted at the levels of the chief minister, chief secretary and the DGP, the problems of coordination at the lower level will automatically get resolved, he said.
The home minister said the fight against the LWE is now in a crucial stage and the government is optimistic of reducing the menace to an insignificant level at the earliest.
Observing that the LWE has claimed more than 16,000 civilian lives in the last 40 years, he said there has been a consistent decline both in the violence figure and its geographical spread in the last decade.
The incidents of LWE violence have come down by 70 percent from an all-time high of 2,258 in 2009 to 665 in 2020.
The resultant deaths have also come down by 82 percent from a high of 1,005 in 2010 to 183 in 2020.
The area under Maoists’ influence was also constricted, with the geographical spread shrunk from 96 districts in 2010 to just 53 in 2020.
The extremists have been pushed to a few pockets, with only 25 districts accounting for 85 percent of the LWE violence in the country.
The home minister said that without eliminating the LWE, the country neither will be able to spread democracy to the bottom nor will be able to develop the underdeveloped areas.
“So, instead of being satisfied with what we have achieved so far, we need to increase the speed to get what is left,” he said.
Shah said Prime Minister Narendra Modi has taken an important decision to bring down the fixed expenditure of the states on the deployment of Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs).
As a result, there has been a reduction in the expenditure of the states on the deployment of CAPFs by about Rs 2,900 crore in 2019-20 as compared to the year 2018-19.
“The prime minister has continuously reviewed it and is constantly guiding us all,” he said.
Referring to several development initiatives taken in the Naxal-hit areas, Shah said the central government has sanctioned 17,600 km of road, out of which 9,343 km has already been constructed.
To improve telecommunication connectivity in LWE affected districts, 2,343 new mobile towers have been installed and 2,542 additional towers will be installed in the next 18 months.
For financial inclusion, 1,789 post offices, 1,236 bank branches, 1,077 ATMs and 14,230 banking correspondents have been deputed and 3,114 post offices will be opened within a year.
For imparting quality education to the youths, special focus is given to the opening of Eklavya Model Residential Schools (EMRS).
A total of 234 EMRSs have been sanctioned for LWE affected districts, of these 119 are functional, he said.
Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik urged the Centre to conduct a study on how many children from Naxal-hit regions in the country succeed in national-level examinations like NEET and JEE.
“If our systems continue to bypass these areas, it is not going to help the cause of people of LWE affected areas,” he said.
Andhra Pradesh Home Minister Mekathoti Sucharita demanded that the Centre further improve road connectivity and telecommunication network and set up more Eklavya schools and post offices in the Naxalism-affected areas.
Maoists are now confined to only two districts — Visakhapatnam and East Godavari — in the state, she said.
Union ministers Ashwini Vaishnaw, Giriraj Singh, Arjun Munda and Nityanada Rai attended the meeting.
Union Home Secretary Ajay Bhalla, Director of Intelligence Bureau Arvinda Kumar along with senior civil and police officers of central and state governments were also present.
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No change in vaccine distribution ratio between govt and private hospitals for now: Centre
By Express News Service
NEW DELHI: Despite a clear demand by at least two states recently to revise the Covid vaccine allocation between government and private channels from the existing 75:25 to 90:10, the Centre has made it clear that it’s not happening anytime soon.Naveen Patnaik and MK Stalin, Chief Ministers of Odisha and Tamil Nadu, in their separate letters to the Centre over the past few days, had said that the Union government should take a further relook at the distribution of Covid vaccines in India.
While revising its earlier Covid vaccination policy, which came into effect on June 21, the Centre is now procuring and supplying 75% of the Covid vaccines being manufactured in India which is being administered for free to all adults in government facilities.
But 25% of vaccines continue to be up for supply by the private hospitals, as also was happening earlier as part of the Centre’s decentralised and liberalised vaccination policy.
Also, private hospitals have been permitted to charge Rs 150 per dose apart from the cost of the vaccine to the hospital.
In their letter, Patnaik and Stalin, however, contended that the share of participation of the private sector in their states has been rather poor.
In Odisha, while only about 4-5% of the vaccine administered have been in the private hospitals, this percentage is a little better — at 10% — in Tamil Nadu.
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In its review meetings, top authorities in the Union health ministry too have taken up the matter with several states—mainly Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Odisha, among others — saying that the participation of the private sector needs to grow.
In a press briefing on Covid status in the country on Tuesday, Lav Agarwal, joint secretary in the health ministry in response to a related question said that the vaccination policy has just been revised and while feedback from states is welcome, there was no plan on radar to incorporate further changes immediately.
“We keep discussing with states (vaccination policy) and if the need be we will always examine the suggestions but the new policy has come into effect from June 21 only and it has pushed up the average daily vaccinations remarkably which shows that it is working well,” he said.
So far, over 33 crore vaccine doses have been administered in India and while the CoWin dashboard by the government does not give a break up between doses provided in the government and private centres, it is understood that the private share may be less than 20%.
Incidentally, the suggestions by Tamil Nadu and Odisha come even as the Centre has been pushing the states to raise the private sector participation.
In a strategy paper issued on the new vaccination policy, the government had minced no words in indicating that the allotment of 25% of vaccines produced to private hospitals is aimed to incentivise manufacturers, by allowing them to sell a portion at a comparatively better price.
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Pinarayi Vijayan backs Naveen Patnaik’s suggestion of central procurement of Covid vaccines
By PTI
BHUBANESWAR: Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has agreed to his Odisha counterpart Naveen Patnaik’s suggestions that COVID vaccines should be procured by the Centre from abroad and the states should be given the flexibility to manage the inoculation procedure.“…We are in complete agreement that the Centre should procure a preventive vaccine against COVID-19 and the administration of vaccination be left to be managed effectively by the states,” Vijayan wrote to Patnaik on Thursday.
“Looking forward to fruitful cooperation in the efforts to meet the unprecedented challenge posed by the pandemic,” he added.
Vijayan said this while responding to Patnaik’s June 2 letter to all the chief ministers where he had sought unity among states on an ideal procurement policy.
He had also advised states to shun competition over procuring vaccines from manufacturers.
Patnaik had proposed a central procurement system and subsequent distribution among states for vaccination.
He had also said that there should be a consensus regarding the procurement of vaccines and states should not fight against each other.
“The only way to protect our people against future COVID-19 waves and provide them with a hope of survival is vaccination. Countries that have focused on vaccination programs have seen a remarkable improvement in their coronavirus situation.
We have to provide this healing touch to our people,” Patnaik wrote in the letter that he shared on Twitter, tagging all the chief ministers.
“But this cannot be a battle among the states to compete against each other to procure vaccines,” Patnaik had stated in his letter to all the CMs.
Vijayan had on May 29 written a letter to all non-BJP chief ministers including Patnaik seeking a united effort to press the Centre to procure vaccine and ensure universal vaccination.
“Wrote to 11 CMs in the spirit of Cooperative Federalism. Quite unfortunate that the Centre absolves itself of its duty to procure vaccines, ensure free universal vaccination.
United effort to jointly pursue our genuine demand is the need of the hour, so that Centre acts immediately,” Vijayan had tweeted.
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‘Governments should run the extra mile’: Naveen Patnaik urges PM Modi to allow sale of COVID-19 vaccines in open market
By PTI
BHUBANESWAR: Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik has urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi to make COVID- 19 vaccines available in the open market for citizens willing to buy them.The move will help state governments streamline their focus on the vulnerable sections of the society, he wrote to the prime minister on Friday.
Patnaik also stressed that COVID-19 vaccines which have received green signals globally from credible agencies should be accorded approval in India.
Noting that India has a huge vaccine manufacturing potential, the chief minister said the Centre and states should support production units.
“As this is an extraordinary situation, our governments should run the extra mile,” he said.
The CM pointed out that a few metropolitan cities, which register the maximum number of cases, should be given priority and age criteria in these places be made flexible.
Any lockdown in these “economic nerve centres” will have an impact on the rest of the country, he stated.
“I am sure that with our continued cooperation, India will be able to fight this situation and save people’s lives,” Patnaik underlined.
The CM further said that Odisha has the capacity to administer over three lakh doses every day.
“Intermittent supply is creating a challenge in meeting the demand. In this backdrop, I had requested for 25 lakh vaccine doses to help us administer three lakh shots every day. Even at full capacity, it will take us 160 days to fully vaccinate the eligible population of our state (above 45 years),” Patnaik explained.
He expressed hope that the Centre would “scale up” the vaccination drive in the days to come.
Odisha has so far vaccinated 47 lakh people, including its COVID-19 warriors.
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Naveen dedicates projects worth Rs 2,337 crore in Odisha’s Nuapada district
By Express News Service
BHUBANESWAR: Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik on Wednesday dedicated a slew of projects worth Rs 2337.15 crore in Nuapada district including the Lower Indra mega irrigation project.Addressing a public meeting, the Chief Minister said 1.80 lakh people of 200 villages under the Komna and Khariar blocks of Nuapada district and Bangomunda, Muribahal, and Titlagarh blocks of Balangir district will be benefited from the irrigation project.
Inaugurating the Rs 220 crore mega lift irrigation project, he said, it will be completed by the end of this year. The project will help irrigate around 18,000 hectares of agricultural land under Komna, Sinapali and Boden blocks of Nuapada district.
Besides, another 7,500 acres of land will be irrigated from Lower Indra through the underground pipeline, he added.
Describing it as an important irrigation project, the Chief Minister said it will not just meet the water need of the farmers but will bring a green revolution in the drought-prone Nuapada district.
Claiming that the irrigation potential of the district has been enhanced to 54% in the last 10 years, the Chief Minister said that 1.5 lakh acre of agricultural land has now received irrigation benefits promoting multi-crops and increasing yield of paddy, cotton, and maize. There is a significant increase in coverage under cotton and maize cultivation, he added.
The Chief Minister announced that a science park and a museum will be set up at the Lower Indra dam site at a cost of Rs 3 crore.
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Parakram Divas: Cuttack, the birthplace of Netaji, celebrates his 125th anniversary
By Express News Service
CUTTACK: Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik on Saturday paid rich tributes to Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose on his 125th anniversary and laid the foundation stone for an ultra-modern bus terminal, named after Netaji, in Cuttack city, the birthplace of the great soul.After paying floral tributes to Netaji, the Chief Minister unfurled the National Flag at the Netaji Birth Place Museum in Odia Bazar and then laid the foundation stone of Netaji Bus Terminal at Khannagar. “Today with the laying of the foundation stone for the Cuttack Netaji Bus Terminus begins the year-long celebrations of the 125th birth anniversary of Netaji. I am sure this bus terminus will achieve international status,” Naveen said in his keynote address on the special occasion.
Notably, the ultra-modern bus terminal is to be constructed on 12 acres of land at Khannagar at an estimated cost of Rs 65 crore. While 180 buses could be accommodated in it at a time, there will be information kiosks on Netaji and on showcasing the art and crafts of Odisha in the galleries and facades of the bus terminal having dedicated area for visitors’ parking, para-transit, service areas, pick up and drop-off zones.
Union Minister for Petroleum and Natural Gas, Dharmendra Pradhan paid tributes to Netaji by garlanding his statue at the Janakinath Bhavan in Odia Bazaar. Stating that the Centre has decided to celebrate the birth anniversary of Netaji every year as ‘Parakram Divas’, Pradhan said that Netaji’s valour andsacrifice will remain a source of inspiration for the younger generations for years to come.
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Odisha Police arrive at offices of the channel to search without warrant
A day after Odisha Police picked up senior OTV journalist Ramesh Rath, today the police surrounded the premises of Odisha TV. The assault on the Odia media house by Odisha police came after OTV had published a report based on RTI replies that questioned the aerial survey of flood hit areas done by CM Naveen Patnaik in August this year.
According to reports, a team of police has been parked in front pf the premises of OTV since last night. The police arrived for a search operation, but when asked they said that they do not have a warrant for the same. When officials in the media house asked the police if they have a warrant, the Inspector of Keonjhar police station said that Police have powers to enter and search as part of an investigation without warrants.
The police also said that they leave only after searching the premises.
Speaking to Republic TV, R Mishra, News Editor of OTV said, “This is not the first time that OTV is being targeted. Ramesh Rath was the journalist who broke the news about the RTI response on CM Naveen Patnaik’s aerial survey. After a day, while he was on his way to the office, Keonjhar police picks him up in a van and they cease his two mobile phones and drags him to the Police station. No one is informed why is he been booked, whether they have an FIR lodged against him. Our anchor informed us about the incident, so we confirmed from the Commissioner of Police.” He alleged that OTV is being targeted individually. Keonjhar police have said that Ramesh Rath was picked up for questioning in a case related to the circulation of an obscene clip during the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, and not due to the OTV story on the CM’s aerial survey. Police said that Rath’s name came up in the probe, alleging that he is the one who provided video details. Police also said that Rath was released within a few hours after questioning.