Parliament
approves new name for Orissa

PTI – Thu, Mar 24, 2011
2:36 PM IST

New Delhi, March 24 (PTI) Orissa will hereafter
be called ''Odisha'' and the Oriya language will be known as ''Odia'' with
Parliament giving approval to amendment of the Constitution and also passing
the related bill.

The Rajya Sabha passed the Orissa
(the Alteration of Name) Bill and adopted the Constitution (113th) Amendment
Bill after a brief debate with members from all parties hailing the move as
"historic" for people of the state.

Supported by all parties, including
the Biju Janta Dal, the Constitution Amendment Bill was adopted by all 169
members present and voting.

Such a bill requires support of at
least two-third of members present and voting. Besides, the majority of the
strength of the House should be present for voting. The Upper House has a
strength of 245 members.

Lok Sabha has already adopted these
measures after the Centre received the resolution passed by the state Assembly.

While there was all round support
for the measure, BJP and Congress members sought to target Chief Minister
Naveen Patnaik charging him with non-performance and heading a government
facing scams.

The bills were piloted by Home Minister P Chidambaram.
However, the electronic voting system witnessed glitches during the division so
much so that even Prime Minister Manmohan Singh''s vote was also cast wrongly.

Participating in the debate,
members said the name change was the process of decolonisation as Britishers
had changed the Indian names of cities and states.

Pyarimohan Mohapatra (BJD) said it
was a "great moment" for people of the state and added that with the
change of name, they are getting back their pride.

R C Khuntia (Cong) rued that the
state, which was prosperous once, has become poverty-stricken. He, however,
hoped the change of name will fulfil aspirations of people.

He said the state was facing many
scams and corruption charges in the present rule.

Rudra Narayan Pany (BJP) charged
the Orissa
Chief Minister with non-performance and said Patnaik could not speak even the
local language. His colleague Chandan Mitra said, "Orissa regains its
prestige and sense of history."

Mitra said while India''s heritage
was revered in many parts of the world, "we have forgotten our own
heritage."

There have been many cities and
states that have been renamed after independence. These include 
Thiruvananthapuram
(Trivandrum), Mumbai
(Bombay), Chennai
(Madras), Kolkata
(Calcutta), Pune (Poona), Kochi
(Cochin) and Bangaluru (Banglore).

 



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