Insult to Mother Teresa is an insult to all Bharat Ratna awardees: Derek in RS

Chief Whip of the Trinamool Congress in Rajya Sabha, Derek O’Brien today condemned the recent comments by RSS Chief Mohan Bhagwat during the Zero Hour. He said it was not only an insult to Mother Teresa but to all 43 Bharat Ratna recipients.

Derek added, “Instead of listening to people like Bhagwat, one must follow the ancient Hindu scriptures like Bhagwat Gita and Puran.”

He went on to say that yes, Mother Teresa converted; she converted Hindus to better Hindus, Muslims to better Muslims, Christians to better Christians.

 

Click here for the full transcript to his intervention.

Derek O’Brien speaks on the insult made to Mother Teresa | Transcript

Full Transcript: 

Only 43 people since independence has been conferred the Bharat Ratna. One of them  is Mother Teresa.

The comments made a few days ago about Mother Teresa insults the memory of Mother. She is far from being a Christian nun; she is a national icon. She is an international icon. So a statement like this, I think, insults all the 43 people who won the Bharat Ratna, and it insults our Nation.

Sir, the man who made the statement, said she converts. The interesting thing – for people like us who lived their lives in Kolkata – is that Mother Teresa is on record saying that she converts. She had said this. She had said:

“I convert Hindus to become good Hindus, I convert Muslims to become good Muslims,  I convert Christians to become good Christians.”

Follow the beautiful classical Hindu text of the Bhagvat Gita, or the Purana. We should follow these texts and not listen to some Bhagvat, because it is the wrong kind of advice he has been giving to our Nation. And the most dangerous part of this is nobody made clarifications on this issue.

Sir, I want to suggest to these kind of people to visit Nirmal Hriday, the home for the dying, or to visit Sishu Bhavan and interestingly listen to former Shiv Sena MP Mr Pritish Nandi, who lived in Kolkata.

The day this statement was made, no BJP spokesperson went on television. Why? Who is the spokesperson, we don’t know. Who is pulling the strings? All we know is that the train is going from Ahmedabad to Nagpur.

One quick point, Sir. On issues like these, there is a difference between the spiritual and the humanitarian. This is a Bharat Ratna who is being insulted. During the whole of last Session, the Prime Minister did not speak on the issue. There was nothing in the President’s Address either.

Sir, the book written on Mother Teresa was called ‘Something Beautiful for God’. God is everyone’s God. So no one should get upset.

Thank you.

Derek O’Brien speaks on Motion of Thanks on the President’s Address | Transcript

Sir, this is indeed a privilege and a reflection of this wondrous democracy of ours, where we just heard three speakers from this side: one, the Leader of Opposition who has been an MP since 1980 from Jammu and Kashmir, then we have Ram Gopal Yadav from UP and the earthy humour of Sharad Yadav, who has been a nine-time MP.

In fact, in this wondrous democracy of ours, a first-time MP comes from a community which is less than 2 lakh in India, a miniscule minority. He grew up in a Hindu neighbourhood, in a Christian family, on a street in Kolkata named after a Muslim.  This is our wondrous democracy. This is a true reflection of our unity in diversity. And in this wondrous democracy, imagine a woman who belonged to a big political party, left the party 16-17 years ago, and got behind the people. She led the people’s movement of Singur, went on a hunger strike for 26 days. She is a simple petite woman, 5 feet and a few inches tall. Today, in this wondrous democracy, she can come to Parliament with 45-46 of her own MPs.

We must celebrate this democracy. We must celebrate this unity in diversity. In what we have heard – those 18 pages, 58 bullet points in the President’s Address in the Parliament – we have heard nothing celebrating this great unity in diversity.

In fact, the last 276 days have been, if I may use a strong word, scary. Let us talk about the three important issues which I think are reasons for how this communal divisive kind of politics is happening. Let me give you some insights. The first is loudspeakers – yes, loudspeakers are effective, low on investment and hard to ignore. Loudspeakers today are causing a lot of communal divide – how you put on the loudspeaker, when you put on the loudspeaker, which community gets affected so. This loudspeaker is a major cause for dividing this country.

The second one is rumour-mongering; the third one is technology, technology of the telephone. India should be less scared of the gun or the bomb, and more scared of this telephone; for example, rumour-mongering like that which happened in Vadodara in September 2014. I do not want to go into the details but there are lots of examples.

The dangerous part of all this is that there is a pattern. No progress was made in the SIT probe on the church attack that happened in Delhi in December 2014. There have been a lot of statements. There have been a lot of empty promises.

On the subject of empty promises, you know, if you observe the interesting and multi-billion dollar advertising campaign which was run by a big party, especially during March, April and May, they used a very interesting device. What was that device? The device of hologram. You can only see it, but there is nothing there – that’s the magic of the hologram. If you look at the last seven-eight months, you can see a lot of things but there is actually nothing there.

Like you talk about 18 million bank accounts. But if you look closely, 95% of them have zero balance. You talked about coal auction; the focus has now shifted to the auction of a coat. At least the textile industry would get a boost.

I want to make this point because there is a lot of talk about the fringe element. My submission, Chairman Sir, is, is this really the fringe element? Or is this the mainstream element?

Many people were quoted in the President’s Address. I also want to use a quote and I think this is a very appropriate quote. I am very tempted, because I come from Bengal, to quote Rabindranath or to quote Netaji or to quote Swami Vivekananda. I will not quote them today. But listen to this quote:

“I have said that I support Hindutva, the Hindutva preached by Swami Vivekananda. But the type of propaganda on Hindutva that is being carried out now, that is wrong, it is not fair; we have to stay one hundred miles away from that.”

I am disappointed that the Prime Minister with his busy schedule has not been with us for this part, because of the timing and who said this.

This was said by Atal Bihari Vaypayee. This was said after the Gujarat riots in 2002. And I want to use this opportunity to remind my friends from this side, quote whoever you want, but this is also a good gentleman and you can take his advice. My Bengali is good, my English is not bad, but my Hindi is putrid.

But I want to say these lines in Hindi, because they can’t be translated.

Mein kabhi antar mein soch bhi nahin sakta kisi dusre dharam par apatti ki jaye, akshep kiya jaye. Matbhed hona alag baat hai lekin ‘Sarva Dharma Sambhav’ is desh ki mitti ka gun hain, is desh ki mitti ka khusbu mein hai.”

This is Atal Bihari Vajpayee, in 2002. Don’t listen to anybody else if you want. Don’t listen to the so-called fringe elements yesterday who want to pass a judgement on Mother Teresa, but listen to this. One more.

“Yeh koi 1947 ke baad ka den nahin hain ya koi adhunik kaal mein humne avishkar kiya ho, aisa nahin hai. Is desh main mat-matantaro ko lekar hamesha matved rahe hai aur matvedo ko shanti ke saath shastradh ke dwara hal karne ki parampara rahi hai.”

This is again Vajpayee ji. You know, these quotes don’t make sense to my 19-year-old daughter whose Hindi is even worse than mine. But when we watch Virat Kohli bat or we watch Sami bowl or Stuart Binny as an all-rounder, when they wear that blue jersey, they are Indian. We wanted to be that way. But I would have to say, that there is a lot of talk about a Digital India, but when we hear these kinds of things, we feel this is a Divisive India.

I am glad what happened in Delhi, and congratulations to AAP for the 67-3 score, because after that we are hearing some gentle noises. Whether the gentle noises will translate into action, well, that is an entirely different story. Now, often when this subject is brought up, we say, no no, leave all this communal aside, leave all these secular aside, talk development, talk numbers. So let’s talk some numbers.

Health budget cut by Rs 6,000 crore, Defense budget cut by Rs 13,000 crore, HRD budget cut by Rs 4,000 crore. Agricultural growth is down, jobs are down, industrial production is down.

What is up? The highest numbers of cases in the Supreme Court today are still against disabled soldiers. Please do something about this. I know the focus sometimes is on MSG .The MSG number is up, but do not forget about MSP. MSG, for those who aren’t familiar, is Madison Square Garden; lots of big numbers there.

Now let me give you the State compared to the Central Government. I will take my State.

  • GDP: India,  4.9%, Bengal, 7.7%
  • Agricultural growth: India, 4.6%, Bengal, 5.3%
  • Industrial growth: India, 0.7%, Bengal, in excess of 9%
  • Service industry: India, 6.9%, Bengal, 7.8%

 

We talk about women’s reservation of 33.33%. Eleven per cent is the parliamentary average of women’s reservation. I  am so proud that in the recent by-polls which were held about 10 days ago, a lady got elected as our newest MP. Trinamool Congress now has 35.2% women MPs. We don’t need reservation. Mamata di doesn’t need reservation, because she makes it happen.

Now the famous excuse is, we can’t do any work because in the Rajya Sabha Opposition is disrupting us. Has the Opposition stopped you from appointing a new Central Information Commissioner? Has the Opposition stopped you from appointing a Lokpal, a CVC, NDMA, and National Commission for Protection of Child Rights? The Opposition hasn’t stopped you. And after all the noises the Opposition made, at least last month you have appointed the Coal India CMD.

Now, let’s come to the issue of Ordinances, because yesterday I mentioned this. The much-respected Leader of the House said 700 Ordinances were brought at some time. So I have got some figures here. They are very interesting figures and they are across parties. For every 10 Bills the Indira Gandhi Government brought, one was an Ordinance. For every 10 Bills Pandit Nehru brought, 0.9 were Ordinances. Now you will say I am doing publicity for the Congress. So, let’s move to Janata Party. For every Bill they brought, 1.5 were Ordinances. For UPA I and UPA II, for every 10 Bills they brought, 1.8 was an Ordinance. And in the last 8 months, for every 10 Bills you brought, 3 were Ordinances.

But then this Ordinance ka chakkar may be a new-generation issue. So, I will quote a person, who I am sure, you’ll take seriously. He was the First Speaker of the Lok Sabha. This is what he said:

“If Ordinances were not limited by convention only to extreme and urgent cases, the result would be, in future the Government would go on issuing ordinances and making Parliament a rubber stamp.”

RS means Rajya Sabha. Let me assure through you, Sir, RS will not become rubber stamp. At least till all of us are here, for the next few years, we are not going to be the rubber stamp.

Everyone has spoken a lot about land. But my party, Trinamool Congress (led by Mamata di, who undertook a 26-day hunger strike), even for the Bill by UPA, asked for a division. There were only 12 of us that day who voted, yet we voted against the UPA 2 Bill. We hate this draconian Bill; we will continue to oppose this kind of Land Ordinance. That time it was very difficult.

Two other points.

Electoral reforms. We had nothing on electoral reforms. There has been a lot of hologram talk before the elections.

On the issue of black money, let me quote the current Parliamentary Affairs Minister Venkaiah ji. In 2012, he said:

“The names of the foreign account holders must be made public, and I demand a time-bound assurance from the Government.”

That was in 2012. Now no black money is coming back. This is the only kind of ghar wapsi we really want. We want the black money to come back. Because this black money leads to money power, money power leads to muscle power, and this kind of power, with media power, is a toxic mix in a democracy. And we need to be very very careful, we need to be alert.

I have two more quick points to make. The Government has come up with this very nice slogan of ‘Cooperative Federalism’. I would like the Government, through you, Sir, to consider ‘Operative Federalism’. The difference is that in Cooperative Federalism you talk and in Operative Federalism there is action. Let me give you three or four examples of genuine Operative Federalism.

One. In the latest Finance Commission report, there is not a single mention of the debt-stressed States, not one line. By the way, don’t make it seem that you all are doing a charity to the States; that is a recommendation of the 14th Finance Commission report and you are merely implementing it. We will be keeping a close eye on the Budget, on the grant-in-aids and mission mode projects. This is because you have done a very nice media spin saying that you have increased devolution from 32 to 42%, but we have to look into the fine print. Planning Commission – you have again gone ahead and changed it; you have changed the name. I suspect, on the Planning Commission, what really happened was that you found a good name and then wanted to back-fit everything to that name.

Now we come to another example of cooperative federalism – ‘Beti Bachao Beti Padhao’. Rs 100 crore has been allocated this year. If you really want to put the States on board, learn from the States. Bengal has put Rs 1,000 crore behind a UN-backed programme called Kanyashree. It’s a fantastic programme. It’s tried, it’s piloted, it’s tested, it’s rolled out. Use those programmes. But instead, what you go on and do? In the Republic Day parade, when Bengal wants to use their tableau called Kanyashree, something happens and you don’t allow it to take part.

Maoist terrorism. Again, it’s a very good example of operative federalism.

Medicines. Bengal is among the few States in India to offer 40 to 50% discounts.

And Sir, I will end now with this love for FDI.  FDI is the solution to all the problems. But look at two points in FDI very very closely. The first point is, 14 years of FDI in insurance has brought in Rs 7,000 crore. These are not my numbers, these are your numbers. LIC dividend for the last 10 years has been Rs 14,000 core, i.e., Rs 1400 crore per year. Insurance penetration (please look at this figure before you bring in FDI) has gone down, from 2009 to 2015, by 1%, and you still want to bring in FDI. You want to sell us another hologram. Current government projects, you say, will be a 3% increase in 5 years. Please don’t make this sound like an election promise.

I will end now with a beautiful rhyme I learnt in  school. I will repeat that now and then I will conclude. It is a beautiful one about a hen which lays eggs and a codfish which also lays eggs.

A codfish lays one thousand eggs, a hen lays only one,

But the codfish never cackles to tell you what she’s done,

And yet we scorn the codfish, while the ordinary hen we praise,

Which only goes to show, to advertise it pays.

 

Thank you so much.

Trinamool MP quotes Vajpayee to embarrass Govt in Parliament | Transcript

Chief Whip of Trinamool Congress in the Rajya Sabha, Derek O’Brien, today spoke on the Motion of Thanks on the President’s address. During his speech, he quoted former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee while speaking on communal harmony and unity in diversity. Vajpayee ji had made these comments after the 2002 Gujarat riots.

“I have said that I support Hindutva, the Hindutva preached by Swami Vivekananda. But the type of propaganda on Hindutva that is being carried on now, that is wrong, that is not fair; we have to stay a hundred miles away from that,” Derek O’Brien said, quopting Vajpayee.

He added, “Mein kabhi antar mein soch bhi nahin sakta kisi dusre dharm par apatti ki jaye, akshep kiya jaye. Matbhed hona alag baat hai lekin ‘Sarva Dharma Sambhav’ is desh ki mitti ka gun hain, is desh ki mitti ka khusbu mein hain. Yeh koi 1947 ke baad ka din nahin hain ya koi adhunik kaal mein humne avishkar kiya ho, aisa nahin hai. Is desh main mat-matantaro ko lekar hamesha matbhed rahe hai aur matabhedo ko shanti ke saath shastradh ke dwara hal karne ki parampara rahi hain.

 

Click here for the full transcript of the speech.

Vivek Gupta speaks on outbreak of H1N1 Seasonal Influenza (Swine Flu) | Transcript

Here is the full transcript: 

Mohodaya, aap ke madhyam se kuch clarifications mangunga. Yeh joh pehla case dohrana chahunga, ki mere jo mitra Naresh Agarwal ne report kiya tha. Ki vaccine ke clarification mein likha tha ki woh teen-chaar hafte baad asar karta hain, toh aapka pehla case kab detect hua tha aur pehla vaccine ka prayog kiya tha aur kya research and development hua hain, kyunki aapne apne statement mein kaha hain ki yeh sirf ek saal hi effective rehti hain. Yeh kya koi immunisation mein nahi laya jaa sakta jise ki vaccine ko zyada effective banaya ja sake?

Sir, aapne yahan likha hai ki 60,000 tenders yahan jama kiye hain. Yeh 60,000 ke number ke piche koi logic hain? Yeh zyada ya kam huyi nahi hain? Hamari desh ki itni abadi hain, jin states mein yeh phael raha hain aur phael sakta hain, toh yeh 60,000 ka aankra kyun hain?

Mahodaya, anth mein main yehi kehna chahunga ki hamare yeh Bengal me panch maute, jo woh bhi bahut zyada hain, uska yah karan hain ki humare yaha ka hospital, BC Roy mein exclusive isolated ward and units banaya gaya hain iske ilaaj ke liye.

Aap chahe toh yeh model desh ke dusre pradesho ke saath share karein, joh dusre pradesho mein accha ho raha hain woh hamare pradesh mein share karein. Ta ki ek bhi maut bachaya jaa sake.

Dhanyavad.

Translated Version:

Sir, through you I would like to request for some clarifications from the Hon’ble Minister. I would like to mention what my friend Naresh Agarwal has asked, when the first case was reported, because in your clarification regarding the vaccine you stated that it takes three to four weeks to have an effect. So when was the first case detected and when did you start administering the first vaccine? And what research and development has taken place? Because you have mentioned in your statement, the vaccine stays effective only for a year. Cannot this vaccination be brought under the immunisation programme? Or some research and development be done to make the vaccine more effective?

Sir, you have written here that you have brought out tenders for 60,000 units of vaccine. Sir, is there any logic or reason for this number? Why only 60,000, neither more nor less, when we have such a huge population and when this can spread to so many states and affect many more? So why is this figure 60,000?

At the end, I would only like to say that in our state, West Bengal, we have had five deaths, which is still a huge number. The reason for this low number though, is that an isolated ward has been set up for the exclusive treatment of this disease at BC Roy Hospital. If you want, this model can be shared with other states and good models that are there in other states can be shared with us, so every single patient can be saved.

Thank You.

WB CM demands immediate withdrawal of the Land Acquisition Ordinance

West Bengal Chief Minister Ms Mamata Banerjee demanded immediate withdrawal of the Land Acquisition Ordinance, terming it as ‘draconian’.

“Immediately withdraw land ordinance. It is draconian. It will affect the farmers. We have always opposed this,” the Trinamool Congress Chairperson said in a Twitter post.

“We do not support forceful land acquisition. I have gone on 26-days hunger strike in the past for this cause,” she said.

The Land Acquisition Bill was introduced by the Central Government in Lok Sabha today, amid united protests by the entire Opposition.

Trinamool Congress, which had rode to power in the 2011 West Bengal Assembly polls with the anti-land acquisition stand as one of its main planks, opposed the Ordinance in both Houses of Parliament during the day.

The Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition Rehabilitation and Resettlement (Amendment) Bill 2015 was first introduced in the Lok Sabha amid an uproar by the opposition.

D Bandyopadhyay speaks on The Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Amendment Bill, 2014 | Transcript

I would request the Minister through you, Sir, that does he at least have an estimate of how much land or premises are in illegal occupation? We are passing a draconian law, but what are the facts about illegal occupation? We do not know its extent. So my first point and request is that the Hon’ble Minister, through his own machinery, finds out what is the total area (roughly) in illegal occupation.

Sir, the Bill expands the definition of public sector enterprises. Very large areas have been taken into account for this and the process of eviction has been made almost draconian. So I would request through you, Sir, that while there are good features in the Bill, the draconian features of the Bill be also looked into.

Therefore, may I, through you, suggest to the Government, that let the Bill be sent to the Select Committee of the House so that it can go through what all are happening and whether all the recommendations and observations of the Hon’ble Supreme Court have been fully incorporated, and what should be done so that  public places  remain free of illegal occupation. But one should not throw away the baby with the bath water. So the main people should not suffer too much because of this law.

So through you, Sir, I make an appeal for sending the Bill to the Select Committee.

Ahmed Hassan speaks on the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Orders (Amendment) Bill, 2014 | Transcript

The whole process of reservation for scheduled castes (SC) and including them in the list has a long history. Gandhiji devoted his whole life for the untouchables’ right to enter temples. Our Constitution eliminated untouchability from the country. The main drafting was done by Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar who was a champion of SCs, and then for the first time reservation was included.

  • This Bill seeks to amend the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950 and the Constitution (Dadra and Nagar Haveli) Scheduled Castes Order, 1962.

 

  • It adds new communities to the list of scheduled castes in Haryana, Karnataka, Odisha, and Dadra and Nagar Haveli. It updates the name Uttaranchal to Uttarakhand in this list.

 

The socio-economic and caste surveys being conducted by the Ministry of Rural Development and the Ministry of Urban Development must be completed at the earliest so that the Government can easily determine which communities should be included or excluded from the list of scheduled castes. This has also been recommended by the Standing Committee.

The Committee also pointed out that while several new communities have been added to the list of scheduled castes, the percentage of reservation has remained the same. The government must revisit its reservation policy.

In West Bengal, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has started a new scheme called Sikshashree, aimed at the social upliftment of SCs, STs and OBCs by providing financial assistance to students of classes V-VIII. The West Bengal Government has distributed 9.5 lakh caste certificates in 2013 alone, whereas the previous government had distributed 8.11 lakh caste certificates in 2009 and 2010 combined. In the last three years, the Bengal government has extended the facility of scholarships to almost 84 lakh students belonging to SCs, STs and other backward classes.

Welfare of SCs, STs and other backward classes is an affirmative action taken by the State to remove the persistent or present, and continuing, effects of past discrimination on particular segments of society. I would ask the Government to re-look at the funds allocated for this cause.

Trinamool opposes Land Ordinance in the Parliament

Trinamool MPs in both the Rajya Sabha and the Lok Sabha today protested against the Land Acquisition Ordinance at the entrance to Parliament. The Trinamool Congress also gave notice for suspension of Question Hour in the Rajya Sabha today and pressed for a debate on the issue.

The issue was debated in the day’s proceedings. Trinamool was the only party to protest against it since the beginning, when the Bill was tabled.

In the Rajya Sabha, Trinamool Chief Whip Mr Derek O’Brien pointed out that in the last eight months, the Government has made a record for passing the least number of Bills compared to the number of Ordinances. He also pointed out that earlier Parliament followed the 3 D’s – Deliberate, Debate, Decide. The Government now only decides, he said, while opposing the Ordinance.

“We are happy that other parties have accepted the fact that the Land Acquisition Ordinance is not right for the farmers. We will not let this Bill pass,” said Derek O’Brien.

In the Lok Sabha, AITC MP Mr Saugata Roy pointed out that the Land Ordinance was the most anti-farmer and anti-poor legislation possible. While opposing the Ordinance, he pointed out that this legislation, if brought in, will be a death bed for farmers.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee had said the situation under the present government was worse than that during the Emergency period, and her Government would not implement the proposed amendments under the Land Acquisition Act. She had instructed her party workers to stage a symbolic protest against the Ordinance by burning copies of the Bill.

On December 31, 2014, the Trinamool Congress had staged protest rallies in West Bengal and burnt symbolic copies of the Centre’s Land Ordinance, which was described as “black”.

Street rallies were organised by the party at Esplanade and Khidderpore in Kolkata, and at the block-level across the State as a mark of protest.

Trinamool Congress workers carried placards which read “We won’t accept the black Land Ordinance of the Central Government”. They also sported badges bearing the inscription, “We are not accepting the black Land Ordinance”.

Trinamool consistently opposed draconian Land Bill: Derek

Statement by Derek O’Brien, National Spokesperson and Chief Whip in Rajya Sabha:

We are glad that many parties are now coming around to oppose the Land Ordinance.

Trinamool has been consistent. We strongly opposed even the UPA 2 Land Bill and called for voting in RS. This one too is draconian.