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PM Modi brought Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita to ensure justice: Meghwal
Speaking at the inauguration of the National e-Vidhan Application (NeVA) at Delhi Assembly, Meghwal said, "I am told that the three new criminal laws have been fully implemented in Delhi.
"The Britishers brought the Indian Penal Code to punish Indians. Prime Minister Narendra Modi brought the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita to give justice to Indians." NeVA is a flagship project of the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs designed to create a paperless legislative environment across India.
Talking about the implementation of NeVA, the minister said there were talks about it being implemented earlier also.
"I don't know what the previous government thought but it was not implemented," he said.
Speaking on the occasion, Delhi Chief Minister Rekha Gupta said her government will bring a bill to regulate school fee hike in the Assembly session commencing Monday.
"The previous government did not do anything to regulate school fees. It spoke about the issue but nothing was done. We will introduce a bill to regulate school fees," she said.
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The Hindu
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PM Modi to address NDA parliamentary meeting on August 5
Prime Minister Narendra Modi will address the BJP-led NDA parliamentary party meeting on Tuesday (August 5, 2025), a get-together of the ruling alliance's MPs which is being held after a considerable gap. The NDA meeting comes a couple of days before the filing of nomination for Vice-President's election begins from August 7. The NDA will have to announce its candidate, whose election will be a certainty due to the alliance's majority in the electoral college, by August 21, the last date of nomination-filing and the Monsoon Session of Parliament. The meeting comes in the middle of a session which has been all but a washout so far, except for a two-day discussion on the Pahalgam attack and Operation Sindoor, due to a united Opposition's ceaseless protest against the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in Bihar by the Election Commission of India. Mr. Modi is expected to speak on a host of current issues as the Opposition has been raising the heat over the poll body's alleged partisan conduct favouring the government, and the Pahalgam terror attack and Operation Sindoor. The Prime Minister is also likely to be felicitated by the parliamentary party over his government's military response to the terror strike. The electoral college for the vice president poll includes MPs of the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha, and its current strength is 782. If the Opposition also names a candidate, a distinct possibility, then the poll is scheduled to be held on September 9. Sources said Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju and a few BJP national general secretaries are likely to be coordinating with allies for the vice presidential poll. Since the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, when the BJP lost its majority but comfortably crossed the halfway mark with allies, the sessional meeting of the party's MPs was expanded to include its allies. PM Modi had addressed the first such meeting on July 2. However, no meeting has been held in the last few sessions. Before the last national elections, he used to address the weekly meetings of BJP parliamentary party, now expanded to include party's allies such as the TDP, JD(U), and LJP (Ram Vilas). The meeting is attended by MPs of the ruling alliance, and Mr. Modi often covers a sweep of political and governance issues, and at times touches on the government's agenda in Parliament. He often offers to the MPs talking points to be raised in public, especially their constituencies.

The Hindu
16 minutes ago
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TDP, YSRCP have failed A.P.: Ex-Union Minister
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Hindustan Times
an hour ago
- Hindustan Times
New doctrine & the terrorist food chain
Union home minister Amit Shah recently detailed the killing of three terrorists in the forests of Dachigam, and recounted the forensic evidence linking them to the Pahalgam attack. Much is yet to be revealed about their movements and their handlers as their communication sets and other electronic equipment are examined. What is certain is that these are highly trained terrorists, almost irregular, able to virtually disappear into the forests and with little contact with the population. More such groups are understood to be in the forests, waiting for a signal to move. In this context, we must evaluate India's new doctrine, which states that any terrorist attack will be considered an act of war, and retaliation not just against terrorists, but also against their backers. That's a much-needed drawing of red lines in the face of a persistent terrorist threat. But wars of any kind, limited or otherwise, are an expensive business, in this case, requiring almost continuous military readiness. Certainly, it can be done, and actions towards that are well in hand. But ideally, it would be as well to prevent terrorists from gaining their objectives in the first place. That means dealing with it in its entire spectrum. First, it is now obvious that the Pahalgam attack had several simultaneous objectives. In descending order, the first was to light a fire in Kashmir that would end the influx of tourists into Kashmir, and to coerce the security forces to once again launch forceful counter terrorism (CT) operations in the Valley. Both are linked issues, and both have the potential to send Kashmir back to the 1990s. Though the Amarnath yatra has picked up in full scale, together with security measures, tourism is a different kettle of fish. The sight of thousands of soldiers standing around is hardly likely to enthuse the average selfie-seeking tourist. But oversight is vital, and it is time to shift from the time-tested method of blanketing the area with troops to one that involves intense surveillance camera coverage, paired with facial recognition, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and big data. China's Safe Cities projects are a flourishing business, using both foreign vendors and local manufacturers, and are exported elsewhere, including Pakistan. Islamabad is now fitting another 3000 AI-enabled cameras in addition to the 2,500 already there. Notice that Islamabad has largely escaped terror. Even as soldiers disappear from the streets, tourism can take off safely, giving Kashmiris their income and preventing a relapse to supporting terrorists for money. This also leaves the security forces with manpower to do other CT tasks. This time round, ways have to be found to knit CT operations into a public programme for local safety. Second, the methodology of Pahalgam, deliberately separating Muslims from Hindus, and gunning down the latter, is aimed at the larger Bharat, and is the most dangerous tool yet. That an almost derelict terror group, the Al Qaeda in the Indian subcontinent, called for Muslims to rise against the present government in a holy war, and that too in both English and Urdu, is one indication. Then, there is a spate of disinformation; for instance, a recent video of a man from a minority community allegedly beating his Hindu wife. A fact check showed this as completely false. Others are aimed at communally sensitive areas like Sambhal in Uttar Pradesh, where a video claiming an alleged attack on Hindu devotees on their way to a temple by a group of jihadists was a fight within the group over fruit. Guidelines prepared by the ministry of home affairs need to be updated, particularly in border areas like West Bengal, where a variety of criminal elements operate together with jihadis from Bangladesh. Local politics hardly helps. An empowered committee comprising experts from different fields — from information warfare to social sciences — needs to review the ways to deal with a communal divide that is being further fostered, with imaginative solutions rather than sops to any community. Third, there is the reality of near round-the-clock operational readiness. That includes not only making or buying critical weaponry for stand-off war, but also a commitment to stock inventory for a conflict which may break out at any time and at very short notice. The challenges are outlined extensively elsewhere in terms of creating a conventional capability that will deter in itself, promising multiple ways of punishment that will prevent Islamabad's usual recourse to crying wolf with nuclear weapons. But in terms of CT, what is vital is better 'eyes and ears'. That is, the ability to listen in to terrorist conversations, not just to intruders, but also their handlers, entire families, and everybody around them. Terrorists have become tech smart, not just in communication with so-called 'ultra sets' that completely bypass mobile towers and self-erasing messages, but in raising and moving money. That means better technical solutions, and highly boosted human intelligence. In sum, all our major intelligence agencies need more funding, as well as partners from countries with a strong self-interest in such operations. Finally, terrorism in Pakistan is sponsored by less than 0.0002% of the population, which is the army and its proxies. Generally, civilian leaders have an interest in prosperity and turning Pakistan into a hub for cross-continental trade, because it promises money for themselves and their voter base. This was once proposed by then army chief General Bajwa, and backed by then prime minister Imran Khan. Diplomacy must focus tightly on regenerating a flailing democracy-first narrative, ensuring that international aid is tied to democracy, and publicising that considerable largesse awaits if the Pakistan army steps back into the shadows. It's a tall order, but not impossible. A post-Sindoor Gallup poll showed high praise of the army, but also strong support for reviving trade and sports links with India. To deal with terrorism, understand the whole food chain — from ambitious generals to the hawala traders. As seen recently, war only gives them the oxygen they crave. Peace would choke them to death. Tara Kartha is a former director of the National Security Council Secretariat. The views expressed are personal.