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Hazardous waste materials impounded

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The New Indian Express 08.09.2009

Hazardous waste materials impounded

TUTICORIN: Nine containers of municipal and hazardous waste materials imported from foreign countries by four different companies after false declaration have been impounded in the port here by customs officials.

 

The containers, intercepted by officials of special intelligence and investigation branch of Tuticorin Customs following a tip-off, were packed with waste ranging from used hand gloves to condoms and plastic materials, totalling 195 tonnes, customs officials told reporters here today.

 

The containers had come by sea from Malaysia, Spain and Saudi Arabia over a period of last one month, they said adding that the consignees were all companies based in Tamil Nadu.

 

The State Pollution Control Board had opined that no clearance should be allowed for the containers and they be sent back to the consingors. Action in this regard was underway, the officials said.

 

A container which arrived from Malaysia was declared as rejected latex stock lot, but on examination it was found to be used surgical gloves, condoms etc, they said.

 

In the second case, four containers that arrived from Barcelona, Spain, but no documents were filed for clearance.

 

These were found to contain plastic wastes which emited foul smell. In this case, the importer themselves agreed to re-export the goods back to Spain.

 

Another four containers that arrived from Saudi Arabia were declared as mixed plastic scrap, but turned out to be hazardours waste materials.

 

Face of urban poverty

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The New Indian Express 08.09.2009

Face of urban poverty



As India is getting rapidly urbanised, a disturbing phenomenon – ‘urbanisation of poverty’ – is taking deep roots. Being the fastest urbanising State in the country, this is of serious concern to Tamil Nadu in general and Chennai in particular. For, urban poverty is much crueler than rural poverty since it exists in the midst of opulent wealth and its vulgar display.

The ‘India: Urban Poverty Report, 2009’, prepared with the support of the United Nations Development Programme has certain revealing facts. According to the study, an estimated 23.7 per cent of the urban population was living in slums amid squalor, crime, disease and tension.

The key finding of this report is that poverty in Indian cities is not an overflow of the poverty in villages but has happened because of the faulty nature of urbanisation.

This is mainly due to poor city planning, urban land management and legislation. The distinct character of urban poverty is that it was not about only nutritional deficiency but deficiencies in the basic needs of housing, water, sanitation, medical care, education, and opportunity for income generation.

The report finds that urban workers were being increasingly pushed into the informal sector, even as the space for informal economic activities was gradually shrinking. And within the informal sector, the profile of the work in urban areas has moved from wage-employment to selfemployment, which carries its own uncertainties.

So the urban poor was increasingly a street vendor, a rickshaw puller, a rag picker, a cleaner, a washerman, a load carrier or a domestic servant. While these workers contributed to the growth of cities, there was a growing trend to push them to the urban periphery, as they were increasingly seen as threat to the ‘Globalcity’ dreams! In the event, though the share of poor in urban population had fallen, because of the increasing pace of urbanisation and the changing face of urban employment, the absolute number of urban poor had risen. As many as 81 million or 25.7 per cent people (2004-05) subsist in urban areas on incomes that are below the poverty line. Eighty per cent of their meagre income goes towards paying for food and energy, leaving very little for meeting the cost of living in an increasingly monetised society.

The Human Development Report commissioned recently for Mumbai, India’s largest metropolis and ‘commercial capital’, only confirms this urban distress.

Despite having the highest per capita income in the country (Rs 65,361), over 1.2 million ‘Mumbaikars’ earn less than Rs 591 per month. More than half of Mumbai’s population lives in sub-human conditions in shanties, but the land the slums are situated on comprises just six per cent of the city’s total land area.

This, in a city where posh apartments are routinely sold for anywhere between Rs 10 to Rs 25 crore and an Ambani brother builds a Rs 800 crore super-luxury mansion! For Chennai, India’s fourth largest metropolis, there is no authentic survey or report on the ‘face of urban poverty’. The Second Master Plan, notified in September 2008, says only this: “Below Poverty Line population during 1999-2000 in Chennai City, Kancheepuram and Thiruvallur were 9.58%, 1 3 . 2 % a n d 19.18% respectively.” But the comparative figures for homelessness, the worst form of urban poverty and deprivation, tells a different tale. In 2001, the total urban homeless population was 7,78,599 and Tamil Nadu had a high 7.3% compared to Delhi at 3.1% and Bihar 1.6%. Extreme poverty topped the list of reasons why people came to the streets with the highest being 73.75% in Chennai. The situation may be worse now! While so, Chennai’s Master Plan makes only a cursory reference to the city’s economic base as having shifted from trade and commerce to administration, then to manufacturing and now to services like Information Technology, IT Enabling Service and Business Process Outsourcing.

There was no in-depth study, analysis and evaluation of the city’s economy and the extent of poverty. This is conceded in the Master Plan document itself, which is now calling for such a study that is yet to commence! Chennai has a Master Plan for land management, regulation, resource allocation, infrastructure investments and urban basic services that has been drafted without an understanding of the city’s economy and its most vulnerable population.

Adverse effects of the Liberalisation- Privatisation-Globalisation agenda, perceived as the root cause of ‘urbanisation of poverty’ has not been studied and factored into the Master Plan or any other development initiatives in Chennai. This is leading to extremely skewed investment and resource allocation, which invariably works against the poor. Is this the government’s way of ‘prioritising the poor’? ‘Inclusive development’ is the slogan being shouted from every platform.

The question is how can development be inclusive if the decision-makers do not even know whom and what to include?

Last Updated on Tuesday, 08 September 2009 09:10
 

Stamp duty in urban areas reduced to 5%

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Business Standard 08.09.2009

Stamp duty in urban areas reduced to 5%
BS Reporter / Kolkata/ Bhubaneswar September 08, 2009, 0:00 IST

The Orissa government today approved an amendment to the Orissa Development Authority Act and Orissa Town Planning and Improvement Act, reducing the stamp duty in urban areas to 5 percent from 8 percent at present and waiving the collection of additional 3 percent as town area surcharge.

This measure has been taken as part of the state government’s reform commitment to the Union government on the implementation of the Jawaharlal Nehru Urban Renewal Mission (JNURM), chief secretary T K Mishra said.

Briefing the media after the meeting of the state cabinet, Mishra said, the cabinet in its meeting on 22 February had approved the reduction in the stamp duty and the waiver, the necessary ordinance couldn’t be brought out due to the model code of conduct in force during the last general elections.

He said, at present, the stamp duty is 8 percent in urban areas and an additional 3 percent is collected as town area surcharge. The cabinet accepted a proposal of the housing and urban development department to reduce stamp duty to 5 percent from 8 percent while the 3 percent town area surcharge will be abolished.

This will bring down the cost of registration of land in the urban areas and will lead to better compliance. Out of the 5 percent collected as stamp duty, the state government will retain 3 percent with it while the remaining 2 percent will be provided to developmental authorities and improvement trusts in urban areas, he said.

The cabinet chaired by the chief minister Naveen Patnaik also approved a proposal of the state Panchayatiraj department to contribute 10 percent of the hard cash Kendu leaf grant to the Kendu leaf pluckers and binding workers welfare fund. So the fund will be getting Rs 1 crore annually from Rs 10 crore Kendu leaf grant obtained by the Panchayatiraj department. The move is expected to benefit more than 2 lakh workers engaged in plucking and binding Kendu leaf.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 08 September 2009 07:50
 


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