Egypt
G. Anuplal
Bangalore
Sand mining
THE National Green Tribunal’s imposition of a nationwide ban on sand mining of riverbeds without clearance from the Environment Ministry is a step in the right direction (“A sand scam”, September 20. Illegal sand mining has long been in full swing all across the country and is eating into the ecology of rivers and the growth of the country. Although these activities are reported in the media from time to time, no tough action has been taken against the sand-mining lobby.
P. Senthil Saravana Durai
Vazhavallan, Tamil Nadu
Food security
THE National Food Security Bill is an election stunt of the inefficient and corrupt Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government (“Food for security”, September 20).The Bill’s noble intent will fall flat if there are no systemic checks to ensure that it is not exploited by racketeers. It is a fact that subsidies and the food Bill, which is a dole by another name, could kill the motivation to earn one’s livelihood. Instead of handouts, the government should incentivise the underprivileged to help them earn their keep. But India being India, the food Bill, like the other much vaunted UPA project, the MGNREG Scheme, will only serve to encourage corruption and the loot of foodgrain.
Mahesh Kumar
New Delhi
IF the food security Bill is implemented successfully, the legislation might consolidate the political base of the Congress and help many people get essential food items at low prices. This would indeed be an achievement. The expenses incurred in implementing the project could seriously dent the exchequer, but food security is the need of the hour.
Jayant Mukherjee
Kolkata
Dabholkar
N.C. Sreedharan
Kannur, Kerala
Syria
THERE is little logic for a U.S. military intervention against the Bashar al-Assad regime for its alleged chemical attack (“Sarin as part of a strategy”, September 20). Military intervention without approval from the United Nations will be an act of aggression. If, under U.S. pressure, Syria is “punished”, it will set a trend that could leave other tiny nations vulnerable to similar assaults. In the last decade, unilateral U.S. military intervention has destabilised several countries in West Asia.
Shafaque Alam
New Delhi
Uttar Pradesh
THE entire political class of today wants all government officials and bureaucrats to dance to its tune (“Political axe”, September 6). Those who fail to cooperate are axed, as had happened in the case of the IAS officer Durga Shakti Nagpal, who was suspended for taking action against the sand mafia. Not long ago an honest officer from Karnataka was done to death for not toeing the oil mafia’s line.
Honest officers seem to have no place in this corrupt society. This is the sad state of affairs of Indian politics.The relevant laws should be amended to protect them. Or else there is no use having them in service.
Sravana Ramachandran
Udhagamandalam, Tamil Nadu
THE brazen way in which Durga Nagpal was suspended even after the District Magistrate gave her a clean chit in his inquiry report smacks of arrogance and arbitrariness on the part of Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav. Despite prima facie evidence that many Ministers have links with the sand mafia, it is baffling that the Chief Minister defended his government’s action and asserted that the suspension was not linked to the sand mafia.
Further with half of the members of the State legislature facing charges of serious crimes such as murder and rape, the alacrity with which Akhilesh Yadav suspended an honest officer is surprising.
K.R. Srinivasan
Secunderabad, Andhra Pradesh
Tariq Ali
WHEN an agnostic ponders the affairs of the contemporary world, he finds disorder everywhere and is unable to find reasons for it or advance a remedy (“The new world disorder”, August 9). For those who believe in god, there is life after death and the knowledge that all human beings have to appear before god to give an account of their life.
They have to live their worldly life in accordance to divine guidance. The disorder in the world occurs because of non-compliance to this guidance and those who are non-compliant will have to face the consequences. Tariq Ali’s book “The Clash of Fundamentalisms” does not cover this basic fact, and this is, in my view, a flaw in the author’s vision.
Shakil Ahmed
Hyderabad