[Other reports indicate that the Bill has been referred to the Standing
Committee attached to Energy, headed by Mulayam Singh Yadav.
Apparently, the Department of Atomic Energy does not have any Standing
Committee attached to it.

Can a procedural objection be raised as regards the competence of the
Standing Committee to examine the Bill to which it has been referred?
Any one, any idea?
The central issue of course is to force the government to engage in wider
public consultations.

(The supports of the Yadav duo, apparently, have been purchased at the cost
of the Women's Reservation Bill. That's too unfortunate. And also conceding
to include "caste" as a parameter in the ongoing census enumeration. That's,
however, highly welcome.)

The CNDP Letter to the PM is reproduced here for ready reference.

http://cndpindia.org/news.php?item.35.2

 CNDP Open Letter to the Prime Minister of India, and Ruling UPA
Chairperson, Demanding Public Consultation on 'Civil Liability for Nuclear
Damage Bill 2010
In view of the Budget Session of the Parliament recommencing on 15 04 2010
and the Union Government being reportedly keen to table the subject Bill,
and also push it through, if possible; the following letter was faxed to the
Indian Prime Minister, with a copy to the ruling UPA Chairperson, by the
Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace (CNDP) on 14 04 10 and hard
copies delivered on 15 04 10.
Copies handed over to a number of MPs as well.

The letter is self-explanatory.

Sukla Sen
17 04 2010


To

Dr. Manmohan Singh
Hon’ble Prime Minister,
Government of India,
South Block,
New Delhi 110 001


Dated: April 14 2010

Sub: Public Consultation on 'Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Bill 2010'

Dear Dr. Singh,


We the undersigned hereby express our grave concerns at the implications of
the 'Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Bill 2010', copies of which have
already been distributed to the members of the Parliament

*The defining features of the Bill*, as it appears, *are as under*:

*One*, it is an attempt to enact a law defining and tackling civil liability
for nuclear damage, which does not obtain as of now, to facilitate
participation of foreign players in Indian nuclear market.
*Two*, the Bill is also a move towards joining the Convention on
Supplementary Compensation (CSC) regime by enacting a law in alignment with
that.
*Three*, the Bill is a stepping stone to ensure entry of private players,
whether foreign or indigenous, as "operators", as had been demanded by the
FICCI in its June 2009 Report. And the Bill proposes to go way beyond the
CSC framework to roll out a red carpet for he prospective private players to
assume the mantle of "operator".

*Our major concerns*, in brief, *are as under*:

*I*. The entry of private players as "operators" is too dangerous given the
unique nature of nuclear power industry and its catastrophic potentials, as
chillingly illustrated by the Chernobyl Disaster on April 26 1986. The fact
is that profit maximisation is the very raison d'etre of a private
enterprise giving rise to the consequent innate tendency to cut corners in
terms of safety measures. Regulatory mechanisms can at best only “regulate”.
Hence, the envisaged ushering in of private players as “operators” of
nuclear power plants is an open invitation to disaster.
*II*. There must not be any overall "cap" on the quantum of compensation to
potential victims. That is too unjust and inhumane. (The CSC, by the way,
does NOT so obligate. Nor does it obligate entry of private "operators".) It
has to relate to the actual damages caused. The overall “cap” of 300 million
SDR, which works out to about 460 million US$, is even lower than the
compensation amount of US$ 470 million ratified by the Indian Supreme Court
to the victims of Bhopal Gas Disaster way back in 1989.
*III*. The Bill pegs the “liability” of the private “operator” at Rs. 500
crore per incident, with the further proviso to lower it down to even
paltrier Rs. 100 crore. And the state, i.e. the Indian taxpayers/citizens,
will have to pay, in case of an accident in a privately operated nuclear
power plant, the amount of “liability”, i.e. compensations for damages,
exceeding the “cap” for a private "operator" subject to the overall limit of
300 million SDR. (Even in this case, The CSC does NOT obligate to peg the
"cap" for the "liability" of any "operator" any lower than 300 million SDR,
which amounts to around Rs. 2,100 crore or 460 million US$. And while the
CSC obligates that must be a cap of 300 million SDR, it does not envisage
any overall cap on the compensation to be made available to the victims by a
member nation.) This is evidently a brazen attempt to favour private
enterprises at the cost of Indian citizens.

*Given such serious apprehensions and grave implications for the country,
you are hereby urged to desist from any attempt to enact the Bill without
detailed examinations of its various provisions. The Bill must be opened up
for wider and transparent public consultations, just not among the
parliamentarians, before any further step is taken to formally approve it*.

Yours sincerely,

Achin Vanaik
ND Jayaprakash
Admiral (Rtd.) L Ramdas
Amarjeet Kaur
J Sri Raman
Sukla Sen
for the *Coalition for Nuclear Disarmament and Peace (CNDP)*


Cc:
Smt. Sonia Gandhi
Chairperson,
United Progressive Alliance,
10, Janpath,
<http://cndpindia.org/news.php?item.35.2>New Delhi 110 011]

http://beta.thehindu.com/news/national/article424147.ece?homepage=true

<http://beta.thehindu.com/news/national/article424147.ece?homepage=true>
Published: May 7, 2010 14:33 IST | Updated: May 7, 2010 15:16 IST
Nuclear liability Bill introduced amid Opposition protest PTI

The controversial Bill that provides for payment of compensation in the
event of a nuclear accident was introduced in the Lok Sabha on Friday amid
protests and walkout by Opposition NDA and Left parties which termed it as
“illegal” and “unconstitutional“.

The Civil Liability For Nuclear Damage Bill, 2010, whose passage is a key
requirement for operationalisation of the Indo-US nuclear deal, was moved by
Minister of State in the PMO Prithviraj Chavan after a clash between ruling
and opposition members.

The bill provides for the maximum liability of Rs 500 crore on the part of
the operator in the case of a nuclear accident, a provision that is the main
cause of opposition by the NDA and Left parties.

As Chavan sought permission to introduce the bill, CPI(M) members Basudeb
Acharia and Ramchandra Dome, BJP leaders M M Joshi and Yashwant Sinha and
CPI leader Gurudas Dasgupta said the proposed legislation would violate
Article 21 of the Constitution, a fundamental right that guarantees right to
life.

They said the bill also compromises the right of victims to approach courts
for enhanced compensation.

Amid cries of “shame, shame” from BJP members, Mr. Sinha alleged that the
proposed legislation was being introduced under the U.S. pressure.

Leader of Opposition Sushma Swaraj said her party had conveyed to Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh that the bill should be amended but the government
was “adamant” on introducing it in the present form.

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, along with Parliamentary Affairs Minister
Pawan Kumar Bansal, argued that the members could not speak on the merits of
the bill at the introduction stage and could only talk about legislative
competence of the House on taking up the proposed legislation.

Significantly, Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav and RJD leader Lalu
Prasad, who had opposed the bill in March when the first attempt was made to
introduce it, this time appeared to be siding with the government.

Mr. Yadav, who along with Mr. Prasad met Mr. Mukherjee last evening, was
even seen apparently trying to convince Mr. Acharia about the bill.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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