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NATIONAL
COMMON
MINIMUM PROGRAMME
OF THE
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
May 2004
Introduction
The people of India have
voted decisively in the 14th Lok Sabha
elections for secular, progressive forces, for parties
wedded to the welfare of farmers, agricultural labour,
weavers, workers and weaker sections of society, for
parties irrevocably committed to the daily
well-being of the common man across the country.
In keeping with this
mandate, the Congress, its pre-poll allies that include
the RJD, DMK, NCP, PMK, TRS, JMM, LJP, MDMK, AIMIM, PDP,
IUML, RPI (A), RPI (G) and KC(J) have come together to
form a United Progressive Alliance (UPA). The UPA government supported
by the Left Parties will have six basic principles for
governance.
-
to preserve, protect and promote social
harmony and to enforce the law without fear or favour to
deal with all obscurantist and fundamentalist
elements who
seek to disturb social amity and peace.
-
to ensure that the economy grows at least
7-8% per year in a sustained manner over a decade and
more and in a manner that generates employment so that
each family is assured of a safe and viable livelihood.
-
to enhance the welfare and well-being of
farmers, farm labour and workers, particularly those in
the unorganized sector
and assure a secure future for their families in
every respect.
-
to fully empower women politically,
educationally, economically and legally.
-
to provide for full equality of
opportunity, particularly in education and employment
for scheduled castes, scheduled tribes, OBCs and
religious minorities.
-
to unleash the creative energies of our
entrepreneurs, businessmen, scientists, engineers and
all other professionals and productive forces of
society.
The UPA makes a solemn
pledge to the people of our country: to provide a
government that is corruption-free, transparent
and accountable at all times, to provide an
administration that is responsible and responsive at all
times.
Employment
The UPA government will
immediately enact a National Employment Guarantee Act.
This will provide a legal guarantee for at least 100
days of employment to begin with on asset-creating
public works programmes every year at minimum wages for
at least one able-bodied person in every rural, urban
poor and lower middle-class household. In the interim, a
massive food-for-work programme will be started.
The UPA government will
establish a National Commission to examine the problems
facing enterprises in the unorganized, informal sector.
The Commission will be asked to make appropriate
recommendations to provide technical, marketing and
credit support to these enterprises. A National Fund
will be created for this purpose.
The UPA administration
will revamp the functioning of the Khadi and Village
Industries Commission (KVIC) and launch new programmes
for the modernization of coir, handlooms, powerlooms,
garments, rubber, cashew,
handicrafts, food processing, sericulture, wool
development, leather, pottery and other cottage
industries.
The UPA government will
give the highest investment, credit and technological
priority to the
continued growth of agriculture, horticulture,
aquaculture, floriculture, afforestation, dairying and
agro-processing that will significantly add to the
creation of new jobs.
Along with vastly
expanding credit facilities for small-scale industry and
self-employment, the UPA government will ensure that the
services industry will be given all support to fulfill
its true growth and employment potential. This includes
software and all IT-enabled services, trade,
distribution, transport, telecommunications, finance
and tourism.
The textile industry will
be enabled to meet new challenges imposed by the
abolition of quotas under the international multi-fibre
agreement in January 2005. Given its special ecological
importance world-wide and within the country, the jute
industry will receive a fresh impetus in all respects.
Agriculture
The UPA government will ensure that public investment
in agricultural research and extension, rural
infrastructure and
irrigation is stepped up in a significant manner at the
very earliest. Irrigation will receive the highest
investment priority and all on-going projects will be
completed according to a strict time schedule.
The rural cooperative credit system will be nursed
back to health. The UPA government
will ensure that the flow of rural credit is
doubled in the next three years and that the coverage of
small and marginal farmers by institutional lending is
expanded substantially. The delivery system for rural
credit will be reviewed.
Immediate steps will be taken to ease the burden
of debt and high interest rates on farm loans. Crop and
livestock insurance schemes will be made more effective.
The UPA government will introduce a special programme
for dryland farming in the arid and semi-arid regions of
the country. Watershed and wasteland development
programmes will be taken up on a massive scale. Water
management in all its aspects, both for irrigation and
drinking purposes, will received urgent attention.
The UPA administration will ensure the fullest
implementation of minimum wage laws for farm labour.
Comprehensive protective legislation will be enacted for
all agricultural workers. Revenue administration will be
thoroughly modernized and clear land titles will be
established.
The UPA government will bring forward a
Constitutional Amendment to ensure the democratic,
autonomous and professional functioning of cooperatives.
Controls that depress the incomes of farmers will be
systematically removed. Farmers will be given greater
say in the organizations that supply inputs to them.
The UPA government will ensure that adequate
protection is provided to all farmers from imports,
particularly when international prices fall sharply.
The UPA government will ensure that government
agencies entrusted with the responsibility for
procurement and marketing will pay special attention to
farmers in poor and backward states and districts.
Farmers all over the country will receive fair and
remunerative prices. The terms of trade will
be maintained in favour of agriculture.
The UPA government will take steps to ensure that
dues to all farmers including sugarcane farmers will be
cleared at the earliest.
Education, Health
The UPA government pledges to raise public spending
in education to least 6% of GDP with at least half this
amount being spent of primary and secondary sectors.
This will be done in a phased manner,
The UPA government will introduce a cess on all
central taxes to finance the commitment to universalize
access to quality basic education. A National Commission
on Education will be set up to allocate resources and
monitor programmes.
The UPA government will take immediate steps to
reverse the trend of communalization of education that
had set in the past five years. It will also ensure that
all institutions of higher learning and professional
education retain their autonomy. The UPA will ensure
that nobody is denied professional education because he
or she is poor.
Academic excellence and professional competence will
be the sole criteria for all appointments to bodies like
the Indian Council for Historical Research, Indian
Council for Social Science Research, University Grants
Commission, National Council for Educational Research
and Training, etc. Steps will be taken to remove the
communalization of the school syllabus that has taken
place in the past five years. A review committee of
experts will be set up for this purpose.
A national cooked nutritious mid-day meal scheme
funded mainly by the central government, will be
introduced in primary and secondary schools. An
appropriate mechanism for quality checks will also set
up. The UPA will
also universalize the Integrated Child Development
Services (ICDS) scheme to provide a functional anganwadi
in every settlement and ensure full coverage for all
children. The UPA government will fully back and support
all NGO efforts in the area of primary education.
Proper infrastructure will be created in schools for
NCC. NSS, physical development, sports and cultural
development of all students.
The UPA government will raise public spending on
health to at least 2-3% of GDP over the next five years
with focus on primary health care. A national scheme for
health insurance for poor families will be introduced.
The UPA will step up public investment in programmes to
control all communicable diseases and also provide
leadership to the national AIDS control effort.
The UPA government will take all steps to ensure
availability of life-savings drugs at reasonable prices.
Special attention will be paid to the poorer sections in
the matter of health care. The feasibility of reviving
public sector units set up for the manufacture of
critical bulk drugs will be re-examined so as to bring
down and keep a check on prices of drugs.
Women and Children
The UPA government will take the lead to introduce
legislation for one-third reservations for women in
vidhan sabhas and in the Lok Sabha. Legislation on
domestic violence and against gender discrimination will be enacted.
The UPA government will ensure that at least
one-third of all funds flowing into panchayats will be
earmarked for programmes for the development of women
and children. Village women and their associations will
be encouraged to assume responsibility for all
development schemes relating to drinking water,
sanitation, primary education, health and nutrition.
Complete legal equality for women in all spheres will
be made a practical reality, especially by removing
discriminatory legislation and by enacting new
legislation that gives women, for instance, equal rights
of ownership of assets like houses and land.
The UPA government will bring about a major expansion
in schemes for micro-finance based on self-help groups,
particularly in the backward and ecologically fragile
areas of the country.
The UPA government is committed to replicating all
over the country the success that some southern and
other states have had in family planning.
A sharply targeted population control programme
will be launched in the 150-odd high-fertility
districts. The UPA government recognizes that states
that achieve success in family planning cannot be
penalized.
The UPA government will protect the rights of
children, strive for the elimination of child labour,
ensure facilities for schooling and extend special care
to the girl child.
Food and Nutrition Security
The UPA will work out, in the next three months, a
comprehensive medium-term strategy for food and
nutrition security. The objective will be to move
towards universal food security over time, if found
feasible.
The UPA government will strengthen the public
distribution system (PDS) particularly in the poorest
and backward blocks of the country and also involve
women’s and ex-servicemen’s cooperatives in its
management. Special schemes to reach foodgrains to the
most destitute and infirm will be launched. Grain banks
in chronically food-scarce areas will be established.
Antyodaya cards
for all households at risk of hunger will be introduced.
The UPA government
will bring about major improvements in the
functioning of the Food Corporation of India (FCI) to
control inefficiencies that increase the food subsidy
burden.
Nutrition programmes, particularly for the girl child
will be expanded on a significant scale.
Panchayati Raj
The UPA government will ensure that all funds given
to states for implementation of poverty alleviation and
rural development schemes by Panchayats are neither
delayed nor diverted. Monitoring will be strict. In
addition, after consultations with states, the UPA
government will consider crediting elected Panchayats
with such funds directly.
Devolution of funds will be accompanied by similar
devolution of functions and functionaries as well.
Regular elections to panchayat bodies will be ensured
and the amended Act is respect of the Fifth and Sixth
Schedule Areas will be implemented.
The UPA government will ensure that the Gram Sabha is
empowered to emerge as the foundation of panchayati raj.
Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes
The UPA will urge the states to make legislation for
conferring ownership rights in respect of minor forest
produce, including tendu patta,
on all those people from the weaker sections who
work in the forests.
All reservation quotas, including those relating to
promotions, will be fulfilled in a time-bound manner. To
codify all reservations, a Reservation Act will be
enacted.
The UPA government will launch a comprehensive
national programme for minor irrigation of all lands
owned by dalits and adivasis. Landless families will be
endowed with land through implementation of land ceiling and land redistribution
legislation. No reversal of ceilings legislation will be
permitted.
The UPA administration will take all measures to
reconcile the objectives of economic growth and
environmental conservation, particularly as far as
tribal communities dependent on forests are concerned.
The UPA is concerned with the growth of
extremist violence and other forms of terrorist
activity in different states. This is not merely a
law-and-order problem, but a far deeper socio-economic
issue which will be addressed more meaningfully than has
been the case so far. False encounters will not be
permitted.
The UPA government will immediately review the
overall strategy and programmes for the development of
tribal areas to plug loopholes and to work out more
viable livelihood strategies. In addition, more
effective systems of relief and rehabilitation will be
put in place for tribal and other groups displaced by
development projects. Tribal people alienated from land
will be rehabilitated.
The UPA government is very sensitive to the issue of
affirmative action, including reservations, in the
private sector. It will immediately initiate a national
dialogue with all political parties,
industry and other organizations to see how best
the private sector can fulfill the
aspirations of scheduled caste and scheduled
tribe youth.
Eviction of tribal communities and other
forest-dwelling communities from forest areas will be
discontinued. Cooperation of these communities will be
sought for protecting forests and for undertaking social
afforestation. The rights of tribal communities over
mineral resources, water sources, etc as laid down by
law will be fully safeguarded.
Social Harmony, Welfare of Minorities
The UPA is committed to the implementation of the
Places of Worship (Special Provisions) Act, 1992. On
Ayodhya, it will await the verdict of the courts, while
encouraging negotiations between parties to the dispute
for an amicable settlement which must, in turn, receive
legal sanction.
The UPA government will enact a model comprehensive
law to deal with communal violence and encourage each
state to adopt that law to generate faith and confidence
in minority communities.
The UPA government will amend the Constitution to
establish a Commission for Minority Educational
Institutions that will provide direct affiliation for
minority professional institutions to central
universities.
The UPA will promote modern and technical education
among all minority communities. Social and economic
empowerment of minorities through more systematic
attention to education and employment will be a priority
concern for the UPA.
The UPA will establish a National Commission to see
how best the
welfare of socially and economically backward sections
among religious and linguistic minorities, including
reservations in education and employment, is enhanced.
The Commission will be given six months to submit its
report.
Adequate funds will be provided to the National
Minorities Development Corporation to ensure its
effective functioning. The UPA government will examine
the question of providing Constitutional status to the
Minorities Commission and will also strive for
recognition and promotion of Urdu language under Article
345 and 347 of the Constitution.
The
National Integration Council will be restructured and
revived so as to fulfill its original objectives.
It will meet at least twice a year.
Infrastructure
The UPA attaches the highest priority to the
development and expansion of physical infrastructure
like roads, highways, ports, power, railways, water
supply, sewage treatment and sanitation. Public
investment in infrastructure will be enhanced, even as
the role of the private sector is expanded. Subsidies
will be made explicit and provided through the budget.
The review of the Electricity Act, 2003 will be
undertaken in view of the concern expressed by a number
of states. The mandatory date of June 10, 2004 for
unbundling and replacing the state electricity boards
will be extended. The UPA government also reiterates its
commitment to an increased role for private generation
of power and more importantly power distribution.
Railways constitute the core of our infrastructure.
Public investment for its modernization, track
renewal and safety will be substantially increased.
Railways reforms will be pursued.
The UPA government commits itself to a comprehensive
programme of urban renewal and to a massive expansion of
social housing in towns and cities, paying particular
attention to the needs of slum dwellers. Housing for the
weaker sections in rural areas will be expanded on a
large scale. Forced eviction and demolition of slums
will be stopped and while undertaking urban renewal,
care will be taken to see that the urban and semi-urban
poor are provided housing near their place of
occupation.
The UPA will pay special attention to augmenting and
modernizing rural infrastructure consisting of roads,
irrigation, electrification, cold-chain and marketing
outlets. All existing irrigation projects will be
completed with three to four years. Household
electrification will be completed in five years.
Water Resources
The UPA government
will make a comprehensive assessment of the
feasibility of linking the rivers of the country
starting with the south-bound rivers. This assessment
will be done in a fully consultative manner. It will
also explore the feasibility of linking sub-basins of
rivers in states like Bihar.
The UPA will take all steps to ensure that
long-pending inter-state disputes on rivers and
water-sharing like the Cauvery Waters dispute
are settled amicably at the earliest keeping in
mind the interests of all parties to the dispute.
To put an end to the acute drinking water shortage in
cities, especially in southern states, desalination
plants will be installed all along the Coromandel Coast
starting with Chennai. Special problems of habitations
in hilly terrains will be addressed immediately.
Providing drinking water to all sections in urban and
rural areas and augmenting availability of drinking
water sources is an issue of the topmost priority.
Harvesting rain water, desilting existing ponds and
other innovative mechanisms will be adopted.
Regional Development, Centre-State Relations
The UPA government is committed to redressing growing
regional imbalances both among states as well as within
states, through fiscal, administrative, investment and
other means. It is a matter of concern that regional
imbalances have been accentuated by not just historical
neglect but also by distortions in Plan allocations and
central government assistance. Even in the Tenth Five
Year Plan , states like Bihar, Assam and UP have
received per capita allocations that are much below the
national average. The UPA government will consider the
creation of a Backward States Grant Fund that will be
used to create productive assets in these states. The
central government will also take proactive measures to
speed up the industrialization of the eastern and
northeastern region.
A structured and transparent approach to alleviate
the burden of debt on states will be adopted at the
earliest, so as to enable them to increase social sector
investments. Interest rates on loans to states will be
reduced and the share of states in the single, divisible
pool of taxes enhanced.
All non-statutory resource transfers from the central
government will be weighted in favour of poor and
backward states but with performance parameters as well.
A special programme for social and physical
infrastructure development in the poorest and most
backward districts of the country will be taken up on a
priority basis.
The UPA government will take special measures to
ensure that regions of India like in the east where the
credit:deposit ratio is lagging, is improved
substantially.
The UPA government will review the issue of payment
of royalties to states in the area of minerals.
From time to time, previous governments have
announced special economic packages as, for example, for
the northeast, for Bihar and for J&K. For Bihar,
Shri Rajiv Gandhi had announced a special development
package in 1989 and subsequently another package was
announced at the time of its division in 1999 to make up
for the loss of revenue. These packages will be
implemented expeditiously.
The UPA government will make the National Development
Council (NDC) a more effective instrument of cooperative
federalism. The NDC will meet at least twice a year and
in different states. Immediately, the NDC
will take up the issue of the financial health of
states and arrive at a national consensus on specific
steps to be taken in this regard. The Inter-State
Council will also be activated. All centrally-sponsored
schemes except in national priority areas like family
planning will be transferred to states.
The UPA government
will consider the demand for the formation of a
Telangana state at an appropriate time after due
consultations and consensus.
The Sarkaria Commission had last looked at the issue
of Centre-State relations over two decades ago. The UPA
government will set up a new Commission for this purpose
keeping in view the sea-changes that have taken place in
the polity and economy of India since then.
Long-pending schemes in specific states that have
national significance, like the Sethu Samuthuiram
project, flood control and drainage in North Bihar (that
requires cooperation with Nepal as well) and Prevention
of Erosion in Padma-Ganga and
Bhagirithi flood control in West Bengal will be
completed expeditiously. A Flood-prone Area Development
Programme will be started and the central government
will fully support flood control works in inter-state
and international rivers.
All existing schemes for drought-prone area
development will be reviewed and a single major national programme launched.
Jammu and Kashmir, Northeast
The UPA government is pledged to respecting the
letter and spirit of Article 370 of the Constitution
that accords a special status to J&K. Dialogue with
all groups and with different shades of opinion in J&K will be pursued on a sustained
basis, in consultation with the democratically-elected
state government. The healing touch policy pursued by
the state government will be fully supported and an
economic and humanitarian thrust provided to it. The
state will be given every assistance to rebuild its
infrastructure quickly. New efforts will be launched to
bring investments in areas like power, tourism,
handicrafts and sericulture.
The UPA government is determined to tackle terrorism,
militancy and insurgency
in the northeast as a matter of urgent national
priority. All northeastern states
will be given special assistance to upgrade and
expand infrastructure. The Northeastern Council will be
strengthened and given adequate professional support.
The territorial integrity of existing states will be
maintained.
Administrative Reforms
The UPA will set up an Administrative Reforms
Commission to prepare a detailed blueprint for revamping
the public administration system. E-governance will be
promoted on a massive scale. The Right to Information
Act will be made more progressive, participatory and
meaningful. The Lok Pal Bill will be enacted into law.
The UPA government will take the leadership role to
drastically cut delays in High Courts and lower levels
of the judiciary. Legal aid services will be expanded.
Judicial reforms will be given a fresh momentum.
As part of its commitment to electoral reforms, the
UPA will initiate steps to introduce state funding of
elections at the earliest.
Industry
The UPA will take all necessary steps to revive
industrial growth and put it on a robust footing,
through a range of policies including deregulation,
where necessary Incentives
to boost private investment will be introduced. FDI will
continue to be encouraged and actively sought
particularly in areas of infrastructure, high-technology
and exports
and where local assets and employment are created on a
significant scale. The country needs and can easily
absorb at least two to three times the present level of
FDI inflows. Indian industry will be given every support
to become productive and competitive. All regulatory
institutions will be strengthened to ensure that
competition is free and fair. These institutions will be
run professionally.
The UPA government will set up a National
Manufacturing Competitiveness Council to provide a
continuing forum for policy dialogue to energise and
sustain the growth of manufacturing industry like food
processing, textiles and garments, engineering, consumer
goods, pharmaceuticals, capital goods, leather, and IT
hardware.
Household and artisanal manufacturing will be given
greater technological, investment and marketing support.
In the past few years, the most employment-intensive
segment of small-scale industry (SSI) has suffered
extensively. A major promotional package for the SSI
sector will be announced soon. It will be freed from the
Inspector Raj and given full credit, technological and
marketing support. Infrastructure upgradation in major
industrial clusters will receive urgent attention.
Competition in the financial sector will be expanded.
Public sector banks will be given full managerial
autonomy. Interest rates will provide incentives both to
investors and savers, particularly pensioners and senior
citizens. The UPA government will never take decisions
on the Employers Provident Fund (EPF) without
consultations with and approval of the EPF Board.
Regulation of urban cooperative banks in particular and
of banks in general will be made more effective. LIC and
GIC will continue to be in the public sector and will
continue to play their social role. In addition, the
social obligations imposed by regulatory bodies on
private banks and private insurance companies will be
monitored and enforced strictly.
Labour
The UPA government is firmly committed to ensure the
welfare and well-being of all workers, particularly
those in the unorganized sector who constitute 93% of
our workforce. Social security, health insurance and
other schemes for such workers like weavers, handloom
workers, fishermen and fisherwomen, toddy tappers,
leather workers, plantation labour, beedi workers, etc
will be expanded.
The UPA rejects the idea of automatic hire and fire.
It recognizes that some changes in labour laws may be
required but such changes must fully protect the
interests of workers and families and must take place
after full consultation with trade unions. The UPA will
pursue a dialogue with industry and trade unions on this
issue before coming up with specific proposals. However,
labour laws other than the Industrial Disputes Act that
create an Inspector Raj will be re-examined and
procedures harmonized and streamlined.
The UPA government firmly believes that labour-management
relations in our country must be marked by
consultations, cooperation and consensus, not
confrontation. Tripartite consultations with trade
unions and industry on all proposals concerning them
will be actively pursued. Rights and benefits earned by
workers, including the right to strike according to law,
will not be taken away or curtailed.
Public sector
The UPA government
is committed to a strong and effective public
sector whose social objectives are met by its commercial
functioning. But for this, there is need for selectivity and a strategic
focus. The UPA is pledged to devolve full managerial and
commercial autonomy to successful, profit—making
companies operating in a competitive environment.
Generally profit-making companies will not be
privatized.
All privatizations will be considered on a
transparent and consultative case-by-case basis. The UPA
will retain existing
“navaratna”
companies in the
public sector while these companies raise
resources from the capital market. While every effort
will be made to modernize and restructure sick public
sector companies and
revive sick industry, chronically loss-making
companies will either be sold-off, or closed, after all
workers have got their legitimate dues and compensation.
The UPA will induct private industry to turn–around
companies that have potential for revival.
The UPA government
believes that privatization should increase
competition, not decrease it. It will not support the
emergence of any monopoly that only restrict
competition. It
also believes that there must be a direct link between
privatization and social needs---like, for example, the
use of privatization revenues for designated social
sector schemes. Public sector companies and nationalized
banks will be encouraged to enter the capital market to
raise resources and offer new investment avenues to
retail investors.
Fiscal Policy
The UPA government commits itself to eliminating the
revenue deficit of the centre by 2009, so as to release
more resources for investments in social and physical
infrastructure. All subsidies will be targeted sharply
at the poor and the truly needy like small and marginal
farmers, farm labour and the urban poor. A detailed
roadmap for accomplishing this will be unveiled in
Parliament within 90 days. The UPA government will not
cut deficits
by reducing or curtailing growth of investment and
development outlays.
The UPA government is pledged to the early
introduction of VAT after all the necessary technical
and administrative homework has been completed,
particularly on issues like the integration of service
sector taxation and compensation to states. It will
initiate measures to increase the tax: GDP ratio by
undertaking major tax reforms that expand the base of
taxpayers, increase tax compliance and make the tax
administration more efficient. Tax rates will be stable
and conducive to growth, compliance and investment.
Special schemes to unearth black money and assets will
be introduced.
The UPA government will take effective and strong
measures to control the price hike of essential
commodities. Provisions to deal with speculators,
hoarders and black- marketeers under the Essential
Commodities Act will not be diluted in any way.
Capital Markets
The UPA government is deeply committed, through tax
and other policies, to the orderly development and
functioning of capital markets that reflect the true
fundamentals of the economy. Financial markets will be
deepened. FIIs
will continue to be encouraged while the vulnerability
of the financial system to the flow of speculative
capital will be reduced.
Misuse of double taxation agreements will be
stopped. Interests
of small investors will be protected and they will be
given new avenues for safe investment of their savings.
SEBI will be further strengthened. Strictest
action will be
taken against market manipulators and those who try to
deliberately engineer
market panic.
Economic Reforms
The UPA reiterates its abiding commitment to economic
reforms with
a human face, that stimulates growth, investment and
employment. Further
reforms are needed and will be carried out
in agriculture, industry and services. The
UPA’s economic reforms will be oriented primarily to
spreading and deepening rural prosperity, to
significantly improving the quality of public systems
and delivery of public services, to bringing about a
visible and tangible difference in the quality of life
of ordinary citizens of our country.
Defence, Internal Security
The UPA government will ensure that all delays in the
modernization of the armed forces are eliminated and
that all funds earmarked for modernization are spent
fully at the earliest.
The UPA will set up a new Department of Ex-Servicemens’
Welfare in the Ministry of Defence. The long pending
issue of one-rank, one-pension will be re-examined.
The UPA government will make the National Security
Council a professional and effective institution.
The UPA government is committed to maintaining a
credible nuclear weapons programme while at the same
time it will evolve demonstrable and verifiable
confidence-building measures with its nuclear neighbours.
It will take a leadership role in promoting universal,
nuclear disarmament and working for a nuclear
weapons-free world.
The UPA has been concerned with the manner in which
POTA has
been grossly misused in the past two years. There will
be no compromise in the fight against terrorism. But
given the abuse of POTA that has taken place, the UPA
government will repeal it, while existing laws are
enforced strictly.
The UPA government will take the strictest possible
action, without fear or favour, against all those
individuals and organizations who spread social discord,
disturb social amity, propagate religious bigotry and
communal hatred. The law of the land will be enforced
effectively.
Science and Technology
The UPA government will follow policies and introduce
programmes that strengthen India’s
vast science and technology infrastructure. Science and
technology development and application missions will be
launched in key areas, covering both global leadership
and local transformation. The UPA government will
mobilize the skills and expertise of Indian scientists,
technologists and other professionals working abroad for
institution-building and other projects in the country.
Energy Security
The UPA government will immediately put in place
policies to enhance the country’s energy security
particularly in the area of oil.
Overseas investments in the hydrocarbon industry
will be actively encouraged. An integrated energy policy
linked with sustainable development will be put in
place.
Foreign Policy, International Organisations
The UPA government will pursue an independent foreign
policy keeping in mind its past traditions. This policy
will seek to promote multi-polarity in world relations
and oppose all attempts at unilateralism.
The UPA government
will give the highest priority to building closer
political, economic and other ties with its neighbours
in South Asia and to strengthening SAARC. Particular
attention will be paid to regional projects in the area
of water resources, power and ecological conservation.
Dialogue with Pakistan on all issues will be
pursued systematically and on a sustained basis. The UPA
will support peace talks in Sri Lanka that fulfill the
legitimate aspirations of Tamils and religious
minorities within the territorial integrity and
solidarity of Sri Lanka. Outstanding issues with
Bangladesh will be resolved. Intensive
dialogue will be initiate with Nepal for developing
water resources to mutual advantage.
Trade and investment with China will be expanded
further and talks on the border issue pursued seriously.
Relationships with East Asian countries will be
intensified. Traditional ties with West Asia will be
given a fresh thrust. The UPA government reiterates
India’s decades-old commitment to the cause of the
Palestinian people for a homeland of their own. Steps
will be taken to withdraw Indian mercenaries from Iraq
while further recruitment for this purpose will be
banned.
Even as it pursues closer engagement and relations
with the USA, the UPA government will maintain the
independence of India’s foreign policy position on all
regional and global issues. The UPA is committed to
deepening ties with Russia and Europe as well.
In keeping with the stance adopted by the late Shri
Murasoli Maran at Doha, the UPA government will fully
protect the national interest, particularly of farmers,
in all WTO negotiations.
Commitments made earlier will be adhered to, even
as efforts are mounted to ensure that all agreements
reflect our concerns fully particularly in the area of
intellectual property and agriculture. The UPA
government will
use the flexibility afforded in existing WTO agreements
to fully protect Indian agriculture and industry. The
UPA government will play a proactive role in
strengthening the emerging solidarity of developing
countries in the shape of G-20 in the WTO.
Official Language
The UPA
government will set up a committee to examine the
question of declaring all languages in the Eighth
Schedule of the Constitution as official languages. In
addition, Tamil will be declared as a classical
language.
A Final Word
This is a common minimum programme (CMP) for the UPA
government. It is, by no means, a comprehensive agenda.
It is a starting point that highlights the main
priorities, policies and programmes. The UPA is
committed to the implementation of the CMP. This CMP is
the foundation for another CMP—collective maximum
performance.
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