CM meets US Secretary of State in Writers`

Kolkata: West Bengal Chief Minister Ms. Mamata Banerjee termed her meeting with US Secretary of State Ms. Hillary Clinton as “positive and constructive”.

Chief Minister said Ms.Hillary Clinton appreciated West Bengal government’s work.

“They (US) have assured us economic investments Bengal, which were somehow on hold due to political circumstances,” the Trinamool Congress (TMC) chief said.

“I gave her four books of Rabindranath Tagore, Swami Vivekananda, and Ramakrishna Paramahamsa. In return Hillary also gave me an ‘aasan’ with a picture of Rabindranath on it,” Ms. Banerjee said.

“I asked her to visit Kolkata again and also sent an invitation to US President Barack Obama and his wife to visit the state,” the Chief Minister said.

“They will give full support for economic and business development,” Ms. Banerjee said, adding that Chief Secretary and U.S. Ambassador would coordinate and monitor the progress.

“As per partner state, they will invest in West Bengal which was not taking place due to the political situation in the past,” Banerjee told reporters after a 52-minute meeting with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Ms Banerjee said Ms Clinton praised her “passion for work” and promised investment for West Bengal at the meeting, which the Bengal Chief Minister described as “constructive, creative and concrete.”

NCTC to upset the federal structure of the country: Mamata Banerjee

West Bengal Chief minister Mamata Banerjee on Saturday said institutions like NCTC �”upset” the federal structure of the country and was “not acceptable” to the state. She said setting up of institutions like National Counter Terrorism Centre with the proposed powers of arrest and seizure upsets the federal structure of the country and strongly urged the central government to withdraw order on its formation.

“It is unfortunate that in utter disregard to these federal principles, the NCTC was set up by an executive order dated February 3, 2012 of the union home ministry without adequate consultations with the states.

“These kind of unilateral steps of the union government in matters which fall within the jurisdictions of the States only increases the trust-deficit between the centre and states,” Mamata said in a especially convened meeting of chief ministers on the constitution of NCTC in New Delhi.

Mamata Banerjee said setting up of institutions like the NCTC with the proposed powers of arrest, search and seizure “greatly upsets the constitutionally-mandated federal structure of the country by infringing on the power of the States”.

“The IB is, for valid reasons, a secret intelligence organisation, without legislative accountability. There is, therefore, a danger of grave misuse of the powers of arrest, search and seizures given to the IB through the NCTC. A central intelligence agency with unbridled powers of search, seizure and arrest, without the consent or knowledge of the state governments is not acceptable to us,” she said.

Taking the opportunity, the Trinamool Congress Chairperson demanded special dispensation of funds and other logistic support for the state to equip it with modernised police force and strong intelligence agencies.

“The resources at the disposal of the state government are inadequate to take care of the problems in the border areas, inaccessible regions, left wing extremism affected areas and riverine and coastal regions.

“There are serious infrastructural deficiencies that have accumulated over several years of neglect in regard to communication, roads, vehicles, equipments, etc for the police and security forces. I would urge the Central government to grant a special allocation for West Bengal,” she said.

Ms. Banerjee said that the exercise of police functions should remain the prerogative of the state as enshrined in the Constitution and the well-conceived equilibrium of powers and responsibilities between the centre and the states should not be disturbed under any circumstances.

The Centre's decision of creating NCTC has caused clamour among many state governments including West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat and Odissa among others strongly opposing the move taken without consulting them.

Four hardware hubs with 60 units each will be set up in West Bengal

Kolkata, May 4: The West Bengal government is keen to set up IT hardware parks in Kalyani, Bolpur and West Midnapore on a public-private-partnership basis. The state may provide up to 20 acres in each of these places and has sought proposals from interested parties.

Speaking at an IT event and fair, state IT Minister Mr. Partha Chatterjee said, We will make efforts to create an integrated ecosystem for hardware. We want to set up hardware parks in Kalyani, Bolpur and West Midnapore. We have land. The government can provide up to 20 acres. Each park can accommodate 50 to 60 units.

Logistics will include automobile warehouses and packaging units, while hardware manufacturing relates to items such as electronics, personal computers and laptops. The government`s thrust on hardware will be evident in the new IT policy of the state.

According to data compiled by research agencies, the overall Indian IT spend for 2012 is expected to reach about Rs 100,000 crore.

The share of the eastern region is likely to be around 9 per cent.

Four hardware hubs with 60 units each will be set up in West Bengal, the government said on Friday. “The state already has the land for these hubs,” Industry Minister Partha Chatterjee told. The government's much-awaited IT policy was in its final stages of drafting, he said.

An expert committee drawing up the policy includes N.R. Narayana Murthy, the Infosys co-founder, and Sam Pitroda, adviser to the Prime Minister on public information, infrastructure and innovations.