INDIA
ANTI-TRAFFICKING BILL IS THE WORST VICTIM OF LOK SABHA LOGJAM
LEGISLATURE FAILED TO LEGISLATE AMIDST OPPOSITION DIN
2018-04-09 11:07
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It is a matter of great concern that the country’s apex legislature, Parliament of India, is finding it increasingly difficult to legislate, if one goes by the outcome of the second part of the less-than-five- week-long budget session, 2018-19, that ended within minutes of its last business day on April 6. The valedictory reference by Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan mentioned that ‘due to interruptions and forced adjournments the business of the lower house was disrupted for 127 hours and 45 minutes’ and the house had to work overtime for nine hours and 47 minutes to transact very urgent government businesses. In total, Lok Sabha, where the ruling party combination has a overwhelming majority, sat only for a little over 34 hours. Rajya Sabha managed to sit for 44 hours. Several pending bills could not be introduced for legislation by the respective departmental ministers. The most important of them in terms of social consequence was the anti-trafficking bill. The latter is hanging fire since 2016.