---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sukla Sen <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Jun 6, 2009 at 6:58 AM
Subject: [humanrights-movement:1612] Full text of the Presidential
address to the Joint Session of Indian  Parliament (Thu-Jun 04, 2009)
To: [email protected], [email protected],
[email protected], [email protected]


Full text of the Presidential address to the Joint Session of Indian
Parliament (Thu-Jun 04, 2009)
<http://www.facebook.com/note.php?created&&suggest&note_id=209503310436>
In the speech, which actually is an enunciation of the Indian
government's plan and policies for the coming days/year/s, has
admittedly sent out mixed messages.

Given the history of the past six decades or so, it is too difficult
to sing hallelujah. But facile radical noises and blanket condemnation
would also miss out some very significant and salient aspects.

While the neo-liberal drive would in all probability be further
intensified in certain targeted sectors - quite oblivious of the
disastrous results brought in by pursuance of such policies worldwide
- and would call for active mass mobilisation to resist; there are
quite a few areas where positive intentions and plans have been
indicated. These need be closely monitored and vigorously pursued.
Turning away one's face would be just not pointless but also self-defeating.

There are many issues which deserve a closer look.
Most interesting perhaps is the agenda for the next 100 days.
Quote
• Early passage of the Women’s Reservation Bill in Parliament
providing for one-third reservation to women in State legislatures and
in Parliament;

• Constitutional amendment to provide 50 percent reservation for women
in panchayats and urban local bodies. Women suffer multiple
deprivations of class, caste and gender and enhancing reservation in
panchayats and urban local bodies will lead to more women entering the
public sphere;

• Concerted effort to increase representation of women in central
government jobs;

• A National Mission on Empowerment of Women for implementation of
women-centric programmes in a mission mode to achieve better
coordination;

• A voluntary national youth corps which could take up creative social
action around the river cleaning and beautification programme
beginning with the river Ganga;

• Restructuring the Backward Regions Grant Fund, which overlaps with
other development investment, to focus on decentralized planning and
capacity building of elected panchayat representatives. The next three
years would be devoted to training panchayat raj functionaries in
administering flagship programmes;

• A public data policy to place all information covering non-strategic
areas in the public domain. It would help citizens to challenge the
data and engage directly in governance reform;

• Increasing transparency and public accountability of NREGA by
enforcing social audit and ensuring grievance redressal by setting up
district level ombudsman;

• Strengthening Right to Information by suitably amending the law to
provide for disclosure by government in all non-strategic areas;

• Strengthening public accountability of flagship programmes by the
creation of an Independent Evaluation Office at an arm’s distance from
the government catalysed by the Planning Commission. It would work on
a network model by collaborating with leading social science research
organizations and concurrently evaluate the impact of flagship
programmes and place it in the public domain;

• Establishing mechanisms for performance monitoring and performance
evaluation in government on a regular basis;

• Five Annual Reports to be presented by government as Reports to the
People on Education, Health, Employment, Environment and
Infrastructure to generate a national debate; • Facilitating a
Voluntary Technical Corps of professionals in all urban areas through
JNNURM to support city development activities;

• Enabling non government organisations in the area of development
action seeking government support through a web-based transaction on a
government portal in which the status of the application will be
transparently monitorable;

• Provision of scholarships and social security schemes through
accounts in post offices and banks and phased transition to smart
cards;

• Revamping of banks and post offices to become outreach units for
financial inclusion complemented by business correspondents aided by
technology;

• Electronic governance through Bharat Nirman common service centres
in all panchayats in the next three years;

• A model Public Services Law, that covers functionaries providing
important social services like education, health, rural development
etc. and commits them to their duties, will be drawn up in
consultation with states;

• A National Council for Human Resources in Health as an overarching
regulatory body for the health sector to reform the current regulatory
framework and enhance supply of skilled personnel;

• A National Council for Higher Education as recommended by the
Yashpal Committee and the National Knowledge Commission to bring in
reform of regulatory institutions;

• Develop a “brain gain” policy to attract talent from all over the
world into the 14 universities proposed in the 11th plan to position
them as “Innovation Universities”;

• A roadmap for judicial reform to be outlined in six months and
implemented in a time-bound manner;

• Targeted identification cards would subsume and replace omnibus
Below Poverty Line (BPL) list. NREGA has a job card and the proposed
Food Security Act would also create a new card. Identification of
beneficiaries for other programmes which currently use the omnibus BPL
list would improve identification based on programme objectives with
the common underlying principle that all identification of
beneficiaries will be done through gram sabhas and urban local bodies
and the list placed in the public domain to be open to challenge;

• A Delivery Monitoring Unit in the Prime Minister’s Office to monitor
flagship programmes and iconic projects and report on their status
publicly;

• Suitably institutionalized quarterly reporting on Flagship
programmes as “Bharat Nirman Quarterly Reports” where Ministers would
publicly report on progress through the media. •
Unquote
A vigorous "people's audit" needs be put in motion as regards most of the above.

The full text is reproduced below.

Sukla

http://newsx.com/story/54516

Full text of the Presidential address
Thu-Jun 04, 2009
New Delhi / Press Information Bureau

Following is the text of the President of India, Smt. Pratibha
Devisingh Patil’s address to the Joint Session of the Parliament in
New Delhi on Thursday:

“Honourable Members,

1. I am extremely happy to address the first session of both Houses of
Parliament after the elections to the 15th Lok Sabha. My greetings to
all members, especially the newly elected members of the Lok Sabha.
They are here having spent the last few months in the scorching heat
trying to persuade their voters on how they could best represent the
aspirations of their electorate. They now have the mandate and the
opportunity to translate the hopes and aspirations of the people of
India into change in the everyday lives of the people. It is indeed a
unique privilege given to a chosen few to represent the hopes of over
a billion people, a sixth of humanity.

2. I am sure that their anxieties, hopes and dreams will weigh on you
as you commence your work. I urge you to use each day of the next five
years in giving substance to those aspirations and in doing so, find
greater meaning in your own lives. My good wishes are with you.

3. I congratulate the members of the Lok Sabha for unanimously
electing the Speaker and that too a woman who is a Dalit with
honourable credentials. This has enhanced the prestige of India's
democratic traditions, that of the House and its members.

4. Last week the State of West Bengal was affected by a cyclone
inflicting damage to lives and property. Let us convey our heartfelt
sympathies to the bereaved families. My Government will extend all
possible succour to the cyclone affected people of West Bengal.

5. I would like to congratulate the Election Commission and the lakhs
of officials, who conducted the smooth and largely peaceful elections
to the 15th Lok Sabha. Election to the Indian Parliament is truly the
greatest festival of democracy in the world and this mammoth task has
been executed exceedingly well. Democracy is one of the finest ideas
that humankind has produced and every Indian election celebrates the
freedom of choice that powers this idea. India has a unique place in
the consciousness of the world as the largest functioning democracy.
When an elderly woman in a remote village proudly holds up the
indelible ink mark on her index finger, she is telling the world that
she has the power to make change in her country.

6. In 2004 my Government had set before the country a vision of an
inclusive society and an inclusive economy. It worked diligently
towards translating this vision into policies and programmes. My
Government sees the overwhelming mandate it has received as a
vindication of the policy architecture of inclusion that it put in
place. It is a mandate for inclusive growth, equitable development and
a secular and plural India. My Government is determined to work harder
and better to realize these goals.

7. A continuing priority of my Government would be to consolidate the
ongoing flagship programmes for inclusion. This will require
re-energising government and improving governance. It will require
meeting the challenge of restoring economic growth, which is now hurt
by the global economic slowdown, back to a higher growth path. High
growth is necessary to provide the government the capacity to expand
opportunities for employment. It is necessary to provide resources to
increase outlays in education, health care and infrastructure to meet
the needs of all regions and all people. My Government will ensure
that the growth process is not only accelerated but also made socially
and regionally more inclusive and equitable. The yearning of our
people for inclusiveness – economic social and cultural -- and the
rejection of the forces of divisiveness and intolerance that my
Government spoke of in 2004 continues as both its inspiring vision and
its unfinished business.

8. My Government is acutely conscious of the challenge of rising
expectations. There would be ten broad areas of priority for my
Government for the next five years.

• Internal security and preservation of communal harmony;

• Stepping up of economic growth in agriculture, manufacturing and services;

• Consolidation of the existing flagship programmes for employment,
education, health, rural infrastructure, urban renewal and
introduction of new flagship programmes for food security and skill
development;

• Concerted action for the welfare of women, youth, children, other
backward classes, scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, minorities, the
differently-abled and the elderly along with strengthened social
protection;

• Governance reform;

• Creation and modernization of infrastructure and capacity addition
in key sectors;

• Prudent fiscal management;

• Energy security and environment protection;

• Constructive and creative engagement with the world and

• Promotion of a culture of enterprise and innovation.

9. My Government will maintain utmost vigil in the area of internal
security. A policy of zero-tolerance towards terrorism, from whatever
source it originates, will be pursued. Stern measures to handle
insurgency and left wing extremism will be taken. Government has
already prepared a detailed plan to address internal security
challenges to be implemented in a time-bound manner. The Multi-Agency
Centre will be strengthened to ensure effective intelligence sharing
and processing and Subsidiary Multi-Agency Centres will be activated
in all States. The National Investigation Agency has become
operational and will be empowered to handle terror-related offences.
Central and State police forces and intelligence agencies will be
expanded and fully equipped with the best technology. A national
counter-terrorism centre will be established to take pro-active
anti-terrorism measures. Special Forces and Quick Response Teams will
be raised and deployed in vulnerable areas. Enhanced information and
intelligence sharing on a real time basis, would be made possible by
the creation of a net-centric information command structure.

10. My Government will actively pursue police reform and in order to
ensure the active participation of the citizenry in internal security,
community policing will be promoted. At the same time government will
continue to constructively engage with all groups that abjure violence
in the Northeast, Jammu and Kashmir and other parts of the country.

11. Communal harmony shall be preserved at all costs. The mandate my
Government received was unmistakable in that the people wanted the
country’s secular fabric to be protected. With this objective my
Government will seek early approval of the Bill introduced in
Parliament for the prevention of communal violence.

12. Our armed forces are the nation’s pride, a symbol of our values of
sacrifice, valour and the spirit of national integration. India’s
defence forces stand committed to the task of defending the
territorial integrity of the country. They will be fully enabled with
modern technology to repel any threat from land, sea or air. To
enhance combat efficiency as also to address the requirements of
modern day warfare, a number of steps are under way. The welfare of
ex-servicemen will continue to be accorded high priority. The
Committee headed by the Cabinet Secretary, to look into the issue of
One Rank One Pension has already commenced its work and expects to
complete it by the end of June 2009.

13. The Unique Identity Card scheme for each citizen will be
implemented in three years overseen by an Empowered Group. This would
serve the purpose of identification for development programmes and
security.

14. My Government was able to accelerate growth substantially in the
last five years to a record five-year average of 8.5%. This produced
an impressive expansion in high quality jobs and also gave us the
capacity to guarantee rural employment and expand social and economic
infrastructure in an unprecedented manner. My Government gave a new
deal to agriculture. Public investment in agriculture was increased,
farm loans of over Rupees sixty five thousand crore waived and there
were handsome increases in procurement prices. These measures
contributed to a revival of agricultural growth. My Government was
able to expand access to education through a large number of new
schools and other educational institutions, support a mid-day meal
programme covering over fifteen crore children, provide nearly a crore
of deserving students with scholarships each year, loans to over 16
lakh students and create a new wave of investment in institutions of
higher education. It was able to revamp rural public health
infrastructure and massively expand social protection through
insurance schemes and pensions. Government was also able to effect pay
revision for its employees including defence personnel, public sector
employees and teachers in colleges. My Government could also increase
assistance to States substantially in the last five years. All these
initiatives were possible because high growth generated more
resources. It is therefore imperative that our growth momentum is
resumed.

15. The current financial year is expected to see a slowing down of
growth on account of the global recession. My Government has responded
to this unforeseen situation with a range of measures, including three
stimulus packages, which have begun to show results. It is a matter of
satisfaction that the Indian economy has not suffered the kind of
slowdown that has been witnessed in almost every other country of the
world. Government has also actively engaged with the international
community, especially through the forum of the G-20, in order to
ensure that coordinated action is taken at the global level and the
necessary reforms brought in at the earliest. Our immediate priority
must be to focus on management of the economy that will counter the
effect of the global slowdown by a combination of sectoral and
macro-level policies. My Government will focus attention on sectors
that are adversely affected, especially Small and Medium Enterprises,
exports, textiles, commercial vehicles, infrastructure and housing.
This must be accompanied by measures to achieve a countercyclical
expansion in public investment in infrastructure sectors including
public-private partnerships in these sectors. Financing the investment
will be a critical constraint and my Government is determined to
ensure that innovative steps are taken in this area, consistent with a
medium-term strategy of prudent fiscal management.

16. Our country has benefited from large foreign investment flows in
recent years. These flows, especially foreign direct investment, need
to be encouraged through an appropriate policy regime. There is also a
need to augment resources in the banking and insurance sectors in
order to permit them to serve the needs of society better. Towards
this end my Government will recapitalize the public sector banks to
strengthen their financial position and also bring legislation to
establish a regulator for the pension sector.

17. The momentum of public investment in agriculture and irrigation
built up in the last five years will be further expanded and the three
major instruments -- the Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana, National Food
Security Mission and the National Horticulture Mission -- introduced
by my Government strengthened.

18. The flagship programmes which my Government introduced have moved
the country towards inclusive development. It would be our endeavour
to consolidate these programmes in the next five years. The National
Rural Employment Guarantee Act has proved to be what it promised—an
effective social protection measure and the largest programme in the
world for rural reconstruction. Its transformational potential is
unfolding before our eyes. My Government would enlarge the scope of
works permitted under the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act
presently limited to unskilled manual work. The opportunity for
improving land productivity through the NREGA will be maximized
through better convergence of NREGA with other programmes. To ensure
transparency and public accountability, independent monitoring and
grievance redressal mechanisms will be set up at the district level.

19. The National Rural Health Mission has begun to strengthen rural
public health infrastructure. The Mission would be consolidated to
make perceptible reduction in infant mortality and maternal mortality
in the next five years. Vaccine producing institutes in the public
sector will be revived to support the immunization programme. My
Government will expand the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana to cover all
families below the poverty line in the next five years. Malnutrition
has emerged as a major health challenge needing urgent response. Hence
the nutrition delivery programme will be comprehensively revamped to
bring it under the watch of panchayat institutions and move to
provision of hot cooked meals in anganwadis.

20. Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan has been able to provide access to children
to elementary schools and retention has increased on account of the
universal mid-day meal programme. The focus will be on making quality
education a right through the enactment of the Right to Free and
Compulsory Education Bill now under consideration of Parliament. The
Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan will universalize access to secondary
education. The massive expansion in higher education through new
institutions under implementation in the Eleventh Plan will enable the
country to meet the challenge of education in full measure. In the
last five years, a wide range of scholarships and educational loans
was introduced for the needy and deserving students. This effort will
be reviewed and further strengthened. Government’s strategy for higher
education will be formulated around a three-fold objective of
expansion, inclusion and excellence. The suggestions given by the
National Knowledge Commission will guide the formulation and
implementation of the strategy.

21. While male literacy went up to over 75 percent in the last census
and is expected to be higher now, female literacy was only 54 percent
in 2001. My Government will recast the National Literacy Mission as a
National Mission for Female Literacy to make every woman literate in
the next five years. Increased female literacy is expected to become a
force multiplier for all our social development programmes.

22. My Government launched Bharat Nirman five years ago as a
time-bound business plan for rural infrastructure. It has succeeded in
reaching basic infrastructure of roads, electricity and telephone to a
large number of villages. It has also achieved most of the targets of
rural water supply, rural housing and has increased irrigation
potential. The remaining tasks will be completed in the second phase
of Bharat Nirman. It is also proposed to set enhanced targets for
Bharat Nirman in the second phase.

• The Indira Awas Yojana, which exceeded the original target of sixty
lakh houses for the period 2004-2009, will now take up double the
target of rural housing to one crore twenty lakh houses to be
completed in the next five years.

• Rural Water supply programme will be completed by 2011 and handed
over to be managed by panchayats in the next Plan.

• The rural telecommunication target will be set at reaching 40% rural
teledensity in the next five years and expanding broadband coverage to
connect every panchayat to a broadband network in three years. The
scheme for Common Service Centres or e-kiosks will be suitably
repositioned to be a network of panchayat-level Bharat Nirman Common
Service Centres to provide government services to citizens in rural
areas.

• New targets would be set for rural electrification, irrigation and
road connectivity.

23. The Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) with
approval of projects of nearly Rs. 50,000 crore in the last four years
is reshaping our cities and has been widely welcomed. It will continue
to focus on infrastructure, basic services and governance reform and
increase support to cities to upgrade public transport. Over 15 lakh
houses are under construction for the urban poor. There is a need to
focus urban housing programmes on the poor living in slums. My
Government proposes to introduce a Rajiv Awas Yojana for the slum
dwellers and the urban poor on the lines of the Indira Awas Yojana for
the rural poor. The schemes for affordable housing through partnership
and the scheme for interest subsidy for urban housing would be
dovetailed into the Rajiv Awas Yojana which would extend support under
JNNURM to States that are willing to assign property rights to people
living in slum areas. My Government’s effort would be to create a slum
free India in five years through the Rajiv Awas Yojana.

24. My Government proposes to enact a new law -- the National Food
Security Act -- that will provide a statutory basis for a framework
which assures food security for all. Every family below the poverty
line in rural as well as urban areas will be entitled, by law, to 25
kilograms of rice or wheat per month at Rs. 3 per kilogram. This
legislation will also be used to bring about broader systemic reform
in the public distribution system.

25. Government is acutely conscious of its responsibilities to provide
greater opportunities for women, youth, other backward classes,
scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, minorities and the elderly as well
as strengthen measures for social protection for categories with
special vulnerabilities. Some concrete steps that are proposed to
create equal opportunities for women are reservation to elected bodies
at all levels, reservation in jobs and a National Mission on Female
Literacy.

26. Over 50 percent of our population is below 25 years of age and
their creative energy is our greatest strategic resource. The
challenge is to invest in their education, employability and
employment. India has the capacity to contribute to a fourth of the
global work force if it invests in skill development of its youth.
Education which provides employable skills holds the key for equal
opportunities for Other Backward Classes, Scheduled Castes, Scheduled
Tribes, and Minorities. My Government has in the last five years
brought in legal changes and investment in this direction. These would
be consolidated. Besides making massive investment in education,
government will focus on the national skill development initiative
that has commenced operation with the very ambitious goal of creation
of 500 million skilled people by 2022 so that we realize the
demographic dividend.

27. The implementation of the Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional
Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act would be monitored
to ensure that all title deeds are distributed by end of 2009.

28. My Government will continue to accord the highest priority to the
welfare of minorities. The Prime Minister’s New 15 Point Programme for
the Welfare of Minorities and the action taken on the recommendations
of the Sachar Committee have, to some extent, succeeded in ensuring an
equitable share for the minorities in government resources, jobs and
plans. Steps under way would be consolidated further. Government would
strive to strengthen and modernize the administration of wakfs, reform
the management of Haj operations and set up an Equal Opportunity
Commission.

29. The Amendment Bill to the Land Acquisition Act and the
Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill prepared to protect farmers and
others dependent on farming from unfair displacement and which was
placed before Parliament could not be carried through. It will be our
endeavour to have these bills reintroduced and enacted in the budget
session of Parliament.

30. My Government considerably enhanced provisions for social security
through old age pension for all people below the poverty line and
above 65 years of age, all handicapped people and all widows above the
age of forty. It will examine extending social protection to other
persons at special risk. Social security schemes for other occupations
like landless labour, weavers, fisherfolk, toddy tappers, leather
workers, plantation labour, construction labour, mine workers and
beedi workers will be appropriately expanded.

31. An area of major focus for my Government would be reform of
governance for effective delivery of public services. Reports of the
Administrative Reforms Commission would guide the effort. Reform of
structures in the higher echelons of government, increased
decentralization, inclusion of women and youth in governance, process
reform and public accountability would be key areas for focused
action. As part of process reform, all proposals to the Cabinet will
have to report on how the proposal under consideration will enhance
the goals of equity or inclusion, innovation and public
accountability.

32. My Government will initiate steps within the next hundred days on
the following measures:

• Early passage of the Women’s Reservation Bill in Parliament
providing for one-third reservation to women in State legislatures and
in Parliament;

• Constitutional amendment to provide 50 percent reservation for women
in panchayats and urban local bodies. Women suffer multiple
deprivations of class, caste and gender and enhancing reservation in
panchayats and urban local bodies will lead to more women entering the
public sphere;

• Concerted effort to increase representation of women in central
government jobs;

• A National Mission on Empowerment of Women for implementation of
women-centric programmes in a mission mode to achieve better
coordination;

• A voluntary national youth corps which could take up creative social
action around the river cleaning and beautification programme
beginning with the river Ganga;

• Restructuring the Backward Regions Grant Fund, which overlaps with
other development investment, to focus on decentralized planning and
capacity building of elected panchayat representatives. The next three
years would be devoted to training panchayat raj functionaries in
administering flagship programmes;

• A public data policy to place all information covering non-strategic
areas in the public domain. It would help citizens to challenge the
data and engage directly in governance reform;

• Increasing transparency and public accountability of NREGA by
enforcing social audit and ensuring grievance redressal by setting up
district level ombudsman;

• Strengthening Right to Information by suitably amending the law to
provide for disclosure by government in all non-strategic areas;

• Strengthening public accountability of flagship programmes by the
creation of an Independent Evaluation Office at an arm’s distance from
the government catalysed by the Planning Commission. It would work on
a network model by collaborating with leading social science research
organizations and concurrently evaluate the impact of flagship
programmes and place it in the public domain;

• Establishing mechanisms for performance monitoring and performance
evaluation in government on a regular basis;

• Five Annual Reports to be presented by government as Reports to the
People on Education, Health, Employment, Environment and
Infrastructure to generate a national debate; • Facilitating a
Voluntary Technical Corps of professionals in all urban areas through
JNNURM to support city development activities;

• Enabling non government organisations in the area of development
action seeking government support through a web-based transaction on a
government portal in which the status of the application will be
transparently monitorable;

• Provision of scholarships and social security schemes through
accounts in post offices and banks and phased transition to smart
cards;

• Revamping of banks and post offices to become outreach units for
financial inclusion complemented by business correspondents aided by
technology;

• Electronic governance through Bharat Nirman common service centres
in all panchayats in the next three years;

• A model Public Services Law, that covers functionaries providing
important social services like education, health, rural development
etc. and commits them to their duties, will be drawn up in
consultation with states;

• A National Council for Human Resources in Health as an overarching
regulatory body for the health sector to reform the current regulatory
framework and enhance supply of skilled personnel;

• A National Council for Higher Education as recommended by the
Yashpal Committee and the National Knowledge Commission to bring in
reform of regulatory institutions;

• Develop a “brain gain” policy to attract talent from all over the
world into the 14 universities proposed in the 11th plan to position
them as “Innovation Universities”;

• A roadmap for judicial reform to be outlined in six months and
implemented in a time-bound manner;

• Targeted identification cards would subsume and replace omnibus
Below Poverty Line (BPL) list. NREGA has a job card and the proposed
Food Security Act would also create a new card. Identification of
beneficiaries for other programmes which currently use the omnibus BPL
list would improve identification based on programme objectives with
the common underlying principle that all identification of
beneficiaries will be done through gram sabhas and urban local bodies
and the list placed in the public domain to be open to challenge;

• A Delivery Monitoring Unit in the Prime Minister’s Office to monitor
flagship programmes and iconic projects and report on their status
publicly;

• Suitably institutionalized quarterly reporting on Flagship
programmes as “Bharat Nirman Quarterly Reports” where Ministers would
publicly report on progress through the media. •

33. Infrastructure is a fundamental enabler for a modern economy and
infrastructure development will be a key focus area for the next five
years. Public investment in infrastructure is of paramount importance.
Bottlenecks and delays in implementation of infrastructure projects
because of policies and procedures, especially in railways, power,
highways, ports, airports and rural telecom will be systematically
removed. Public-private partnership (PPP) projects are a key element
of the strategy. A large number of PPP projects in different areas
currently awaiting government approval would be cleared expeditiously.
The regulatory and legal framework for PPPs would be made more
investment friendly. My Government will continue its special emphasis
on infrastructure development in the North-East and Jammu and Kashmir
and enhance connectivity to these regions.

34. Our fellow citizens have every right to own part of the shares of
public sector companies while the government retains majority
shareholding and control. My Government will develop a roadmap for
listing and people-ownership of public sector undertakings while
ensuring that government equity does not fall below 51 %.

35. My Government is firmly committed to maintaining high growth with
low inflation, particularly in relation to prices of essential
agricultural and industrial commodities. It will steadfastly observe
fiscal responsibility so that the ability of the Centre to invest in
essential social and economic infrastructure is continuously enhanced.
This will require that all subsidies reach only the truly needy and
poor sections of our society. A national consensus will be created on
this issue and necessary policy changes implemented.

36. My Government has been able to significantly increase realization
of direct taxes as a result of improved and simplified tax
administration and this process will continue. The roadmap for moving
towards a Goods and Services Tax will be vigorously pursued. My
Government is fully seized of the issue of illegal money of Indian
citizens outside the country in secret bank accounts. It will
vigorously pursue all necessary steps in coordination with the
countries concerned.

37. Coordinated action for energy would be guided by the integrated
energy policy. The effort would be to see that at least 13,000 MW of
generating capacity is added each year through a mix of sources -coal,
hydel, nuclear and renewables. Village and rural household
electrification and reduction in aggregate technical and commercial
losses will continue to be given the highest priority. Competitiveness
and efficiency in the power sector will be enhanced through time-bound
measures, including operationalising the provision of open access.

38. The pace of oil and gas exploration will be intensified and
India’s oil diplomacy aggressively pursued. Reforms in the coal
sector, for which a detailed blueprint has been prepared, will be
pursued with urgency. The international civil nuclear agreements will
be operationalised with various countries even as domestic sources of
uranium are exploited and work continues on the indigenously designed
fast breeder and thorium reactors.

39. My Government will ensure that our space programme which has
achieved wide recognition continues to bring rich dividends to society
in agriculture, tele-medicine, tele-education and by providing
information to rural knowledge centres, besides contributing to
telecommunication, television broadcasting and weather forecasting.
Several innovative initiatives commenced by government in the science
and technology sector in the last five years and now under
implementation will be further strengthened.

40. My Government is proactively addressing issues of climate change
through eight national missions. Of these the National Solar Mission,
the National Water Mission, the National Mission on Energy Efficiency,
the National Mission on Sustainable Agriculture and the National
Mission on Sustainable Habitat will be launched by the end of this
year. The National Ganga River Basin Authority, set up recently will
evolve a new action plan for cleaning and beautifying the river in
partnership with the basin states.

41. My Government’s foreign policy will continue to pursue India’s
enlightened national interest, maintaining the strategic autonomy and
independent decision-making that has been its hallmark. India has a
vital interest in the stability and prosperity of our neighbours. The
highest priority will be accorded to working with our friends in SAARC
to promote stability, development and prosperity in the region.
Government will sincerely work with our neighbours to ensure that
outstanding issues are addressed and the full potential of our region
is realized.

42. My Government will seek to reshape our relationship with Pakistan
depending on the sincerity of Pakistan’s actions to confront groups
who launch terrorist attacks against India from its territory. We will
support initiatives in Sri Lanka, which can lead to a permanent
political solution of the conflict there and ensure that all Sri
Lankan communities, especially the Tamils, feel secure and enjoy equal
rights so that they can lead a life of dignity and self-respect. India
will make appropriate contribution to rehabilitate those affected by
the conflict. In Nepal and Bangladesh, where multi-party democracy has
returned, India will work closely with both countries to continue
expanding bilateral ties for mutual benefit. Government will
strengthen our close and vibrant partnerships with Bhutan and Maldives
and continue to assist in the reconstruction of Afghanistan.

43. The momentum of improvement of our relations with the major powers
will be maintained. The transformation of our partnership with the
United States of America will be taken forward. Our strategic
partnership with Russia has grown over the years, and we will seek to
further consolidate it. With countries of Europe and Japan my
Government will continue the sustained diplomatic efforts, which have
produced qualitative changes in our relations since 2004. The
multi-faceted partnership with China will be expanded.

44. My Government will continue to work with other developing nations.
It will contribute to all efforts at peace in West Asia through the
establishment of a viable Palestinian State at the earliest. The
traditionally close ties with countries in the Gulf will be
strengthened. The process of engagement with Africa reenergized with
the first Indo-Africa Summit organized by my Government will be
further expanded. The multi-dimensional partnerships with countries in
South-East Asia and the Pacific as well as Central Asia and the Latin
American region will be consolidated.

45. The Indian diaspora estimated at over twenty-five million across
the world is an important economic, social and cultural force and my
Government will deepen its engagement with it. Our ties and kinship
with the diaspora make us acutely conscious of their well-being and to
be sensitive to their concerns. As a responsible member of the
international community, India will work with other countries in
tackling issues of common concern such as international terrorism, the
global economic crisis, climate change, energy security and reform of
multilateral institutions to reflect contemporary realities.

46. Honourable Members, my Government believes that in the knowledge
society in which we live today, creativity, innovation and enterprise
hold the key to people and nations realizing their potential. The
“dreary desert sand of dead habit” must be left behind. Our young
people are tearing down the narrow domestic walls of religion, region,
language, caste, and gender that confine them. The nation must invest
in their hope. My Government will ensure that its policies for
education and science and technology are imbued with a spirit of
innovation so that the creativity of a billion people is unleashed.
The next ten years would be dedicated as a Decade of Innovation. It
may be a symbolic gesture but an important gesture to drive home the
need to be innovative in finding solutions to our many challenges.
India’s young population is naturally restless and wants to see change
quickly. My Government carries the weight of their dreams. Together
let us dedicate ourselves to making each day of the next five years, a
day closer to the realization of their dreams.

Jai Hind.

Peace Is Doable
________________________________
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