by admin | May 25, 2021 | Business, Business Summit, Economy, Emerging Businesses, Events, News, Politics

Mamata Banerjee
Kolkata : West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Thursday said the state will announce the new IT policy in January 2018 during the Bengal Global Business Summit (BGBS).
“We have decided that we will be announcing our new IT policy in the upcoming BGBS meet which will take place in January,” she said while addressing INFOCOM 2017.
She also said the state is ready to give more importance to the IT industry and is keen to provide various sops in terms of property tax relief and other subsidies.
Taking a dig at the Left Front government which ruled the state for 34 years, for not giving a boost to the IT sector, she said: “Earlier, the state government was not interested for this particular sector. I do not know why? But we started thinking. IT companies are now expanding their businesses here.”
There is enough space available in the state for the IT sector which can potentially create 2.6 lakh jobs by using this space, she said, adding that apart from the state capital, space is available in IT parks in various cities like Siliguri, Burdwan and Kalyani.
She claimed that the state is the “pioneer” of the digitisation programme and especially in digital transformation which enabled the state government to double its revenue.
Inviting industry captains from IT and ITes to invest in the state, she said the attrition rate in Bengal was considerably low at about three per cent as compared to other states.
She urged industries to invest in the state as it is “strategically, geographically and politically safe”.
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | News, Politics
By Sirshendu Panth,
Kolkata : Keeping up a strong anti-BJP rhetoric, West Bengal’s indefatigable ‘Didi’ gunned for Prime Minister Narendra Modi through the year, lacing her speeches and social media postings with sarcasm and choice words as her government clashed with the Centre on various issues.
From mythology to ancient Indian history, Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee left nothing untouched in letting loose incessant verbal volleys at Modi, while the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) continued to increase its vote-share in various by-polls and local body elections in West Bengal.
As the BJP tried to emerge as a viable alternative to the Trinamool, Banerjee in turn endeavoured to project herself as the most prominent opponent of the Hindutva brigade nationally.
The feisty leader networked with regional leaders opposed to the Sangh Parivar — the ideological parent of the BJP as well as several right-wing outfits — and formulated decisions and actions that could give her brownie points over the central dispensation and its propelling force.
She fired on all cylinders, targeting Modi’s key policies like demonetisation and the Goods and Services Tax (GST) while trying to exploit burning issues like sliding economic growth, rampant intolerance, the beef ban and cow vigilantism.
However, it was her colourful and strident attacks on Modi that grabbed the spotlight.
If she likened Modi to the greatest Sanskrit poet and dramatist Kalidasa, it was not because of the writer’s literary prowess but only a reference to an oft-told story of him “lacking intelligence as a youngster — cutting the branch he was sitting on”.
“All institutions (of the nation) are under attack. This is a dangerous game. The PM is behaving like Kalidasa, trying to cut the branch he is sitting on,” Banerjee remarked.
During another aggressive speech, Banerjee drew a parallel between Modi and demon king Ravana of the Ramayana epic.
“He claims that he has broad chest and shoulders. Even Ravana had broad shoulders. And he also had 10 heads,” she said, alluding to Modi’s drumbeating that he has a “56-inch chest”.
On another occasion, she predicted that “Barda” (elder brother) will have to bow out of office after the 2019 parliamentary polls.
Addressing a public meeting in Bankura district, Banerjee raised the pitch further, dubbing the Modi government “deaf and dumb”. But a separate barb was reserved for the Prime Minister.
“He used to call himself a ‘chaiwala’ (tea seller) before. Now he has become a millionaire ‘Paytm-wala’ (one who endorses e-wallets like Paytm).”
Demonetisation, to her, was Modi’s “shameless flop show” that she dismissed on Twitter as “visionless, missionless and directionless”.
Not in a mood to let go of any democratic mode of protest, she even knocked on the door of then President Pranab Mukherjee, urging him to “save the country from the mess” and sought a “national government” minus Modi. Banerjee was ready to accept another BJP leader at its helm and went to the extent of naming L.K. Advani, Rajnath Singh and Arun Jaitley as being acceptable.
While backing GST, Banerjee took the Modi government to task for rolling out the new regime with “disastrous hurry” on July 1. She called the step “another epic blunder” of the Centre.
The CBI probes into the multi-billion-rupee Saradha Ponzi scam, Rose Valley Ponzi scam and Narada sting footage controversy — in which a number of Trinamool leaders were implicated — were also bones of contention between the Trinamool and the BJP.
While Banerjee accused the central agencies of acting out of “political vendetta” on the BJP’s directions, the saffron party said it was an inquiry ordered by the Supreme Court.
Going ballistic, Banerjee threatened to slap defamation cases worth crores of rupees if the CBI did not proceed impartially.
The political battles between the Trinamool regime and the Centre even stretched to observance of red letter dates like Independence Day and Teachers Day.
When the Union Ministry of Human Resources Development (MHRD) sent a circular to the states recommending a structured format promoting Modi’s pet “Swachh Bharat Mission” during Teachers’ Day celebrations in schools, the Mamata government shot off a counter-circular to schools saying the date needed to be observed with due reverence and solemnity as in “earlier years”.
Ahead of Independence Day, the MHRD had issued a circular specifying “additional activities”. But the state government came up with a directive asking the schools to “stop all preparations” for celebrating the day in the MHRD format.
With the Congress weakening, Banerjee kept herself busy attempting to strengthen ties throughout 2017 with prominent political leaders in the anti-BJP domain, particularly those from the regional parties.
She has been following many of them on Twitter, or exchanging pleasantries through tweets with the likes of ex-Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav, senior Jammu and Kashmir National Conference leaders Farooq Abdullah and Omar Abdullah, BSP chief Mayawati and DMK leader M.K. Stalin. She even met Shiv Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray, a BJP baiter despite being an ally, though her party’s views on religion and secularism were diametrically opposed to those of the Sena.
Though Banerjee has stressed on “collective leadership” to challenge Modi, she gave enough hints at a media conclave last month that she is not averse to taking the lead in bringing together opposition parties on a single platform against the BJP in 2019.
(Sirshendu Panth can be contacted at s.panth@ians.in)
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | News, Politics

Mamata Banerjee
Kolkata : West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Wednesday said the state has agreed to provide 74 per cent stake to the Central government in the Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) to develop the Tajpur deep sea port in the state, after getting an assurance that the Centre would build a bridge across the Muriganga river between the mainland and Sagar Island.
“We have agreed to give 74 per cent stake to the centre in the Tajpur port (project) on condition that the Central government would build a bridge across Muriganga river and now, they have agreed to build the same,” she said while addressing the inauguration of Krishi Mela (Fair) at the Sagar Island.
Currently, people planning to visit to the island have to travel by road to Harwood Point (Lot 8 Jetty) in Kakdwip and cross the Muriganga by ferry. Vehicles are taken across in barges but the movement of vessels is governed by tidal movement.
Earlier, the state and Kolkata Port Trust, an autonomous body under Union Ministry of Shipping, had formed a 74:26 per cent joint venture for building the Bhor Sagar Port in South 24 Parganas district.
Subsequently, the state government’s insistence on building Tajpur as its project had stalled the project over viability concerns.
Incidentally, the Central government had wished to take 74 per cent stake in the proposed SPV for building the Tajpur port and it had expressed concern that the proposed project would be unviable if the it comes without partnering Kolkata Port Trust.
KoPT Chairman Vinit Kumar had recently said Tajpur port would come up in the first phase, and Bhor Sagar port in the Sagar island in the second phase.
According to Kumar, the special purpose vehicle (SPV) for the Bhor Sagar project would be the “implementing agency” for the Tajpur port for the “time being” because the SPV for Tajpur project was yet to be formed.
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | Economy, News, Politics

Mamata Banerjee
Kolkata : Taking a dig at the central government on GDP numbers, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Thursday said “effects of note ban scam” and “unplanned” implementation of Goods and Services Tax (GST) continue to damage India’s economy.
According to official data released on Thursday, gross domestic product (GDP) at constant prices in the second quarter of the current fiscal was estimated at Rs 31.66 lakh crore, as against Rs 29.79 lakh crore in same period of last fiscal, showing a growth rate of 6.3 percent.
“GDP figures out. Again no growth. No jobs. Effects of note ban scam & unplanned GST continue to damage economy. Only talking. No performance,” Banerjee said in a tweet.
“Last year Q2 GDP growth was 7.5 per cent and this year it is 6.3 per cent. This Govt only bhashan, no action,” she added.
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | Business, Economy, Large Enterprise, News, Politics

Mamata Banerjee
Kolkata : West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Monday said the state, which has been facing legacy issues in terms of ease of doing business, has fulfilled 336 parametres out of the 372.
The remaining 36 parametres would be met in the next few months, she said addressing the Horasis Asia Meeting.
The state currently is in the top 10 in the ease of doing business ranking and she assured that it would emerge as the number one in the ranking soon.
She also said: “It takes time (to improve the ranking) and we are facing some legacy issues.”
—IANS