‘Shadow’ standing panels to sharpen BJP MPs’ skills

New Delhi, March 16 (IANS) In a move aimed at sharpening skills of its MPs taking part in deliberations of parliamentary panels, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has decided to form ‘shadow standing committees’, comprising senior members and experts, to provide guidance on bills, policy matters and financial issues.

BJP leaders said that shadow standing committee was an attempt to use the ‘intellectual bank’ of the party to sharpen skills of members taking part in the standing committees.

‘It will improve performance of our MPs in standing committees and also in parliamentary debates. The MPs will also be told of the party line on various bills,’ a senior party leader said.

BJP leaders said that subject experts will be associated with the 24 shadow standing committees that the party intends to set up.

Slumdog song ‘Jai Ho!’ has many claimants

Mumbai, Mar 6 (ANI): As the Congress party is upbeat about its prospects in the upcoming general elections after it bought the rights of ‘Jai Ho!’, the Oscar-winning song from ‘Slumdog Millionaire’, critics and commentators said gimmicks like this don’t really matter.

“People are not going to vote for the Congress just on the basis of this song. They will think in terms of what the Congress has done in the last five years. So, they can use the song in their public rallies, but they have a wrong impression that the song itself will help them win elections,” said Meena Karnik, a film critic.

Congress leaders said the song, whose title is Hindi for “Let There be Victory”, will be played during rallies in rural towns, villages and cities.

Senior journalist Yuvraj Mohite said both the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have deflected from real issues.

“The song was also played in one of the rallies of Narendra Modi. So, now Congress is accusing BJP of using the song in their promotion. So, both the parties are now trading charges on this. People would rather want them to take up issues related to them and not fight over a song,” he said.

Tushar Gandhi, a great-grandson of Mahatma Gandhi, said the trend is a “tragedy of our democracy.”

“Every party today resorts to film stars, film names and Bollywood songs. That is the tragedy of our democracy. Instead of debate on policy matters, we are getting wooed by catchy numbers and catchy slogans and beautiful starlets,” said Tushar. (ANI)

No breach of national secrets, claims MEA

New Delhi, Feb 15 (ANI): The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) on Sunday asserted that none of its hacked 600 computers have been misused by miscreants.

According to Times Now, the MEA machines were infected by spyware -a bug that gets into a computer taking control of the user’s actions.

The computers in the ministry’s Pakistan section were also infected in the process.

However, the MEA has maintained that no national secrets were breached.

Ministry officials said that each senior official has two computers, one that connects to the Internet and the other for classified work, which is not connected to the net.

Earlier, in May 2008, the MEA’s internal communication network was suspected to have been broken into by Chinese hackers.

It was also said back then that the Chinese committed a series of intrusions into secure systems of the ministry.

Hacking the network assists a hacker to access the internal policy-matters of a nation.

The hackers reportedly barged into an encrypted computer network with the help of program and wrote software to decrypt the system. (ANI)