Lok Sabha takes up Disaster Management (Amendment) Bill 2024 for consideration & passing
By News On Air Dec 11, 2024
The Lok Sabha has taken up the Disaster Management (Amendment) Bill, 2024, for consideration and passing. The Bill seeks to amend the Disaster Management Act, 2005, and is intended to strengthen the efficient working of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) and the State Disaster Management Authorities (SDMA). The Bill empowers the NDMA and SDMA to prepare disaster plans at the national and state levels instead of the National Executive Committee and the State Executive Committee. The Bill also empowers the state government to constitute a separate Urban Disaster Management Authority for state capitals and cities with a municipal corporation. The bill will provide for the creation of a disaster database at the national and state levels. The Bill empowers the state governments to constitute a State Disaster Response Force (SDRF).
Moving the Bill, Minister of State for Home Affairs, Nityanand Rai, said the government has taken several steps to improve disaster management policies and build a robust ecosystem to deal with natural disasters. He said the Disaster Management Act was brought in in 2005, and states were experiencing some difficulties in implementing the provisions of the Act. He said the bill has been brought to strengthen the Disaster Management Act. Highlighting the steps taken by the government, the minister said four new battalions have been added to the NDRF, and a robust system has been prepared for early warning and prediction of natural calamities, which has considerably reduced the loss of human life and property.
Congress MP Shashi Tharoor charged the government with bulldozing the bill in Parliament. Putting forth his objections, the Congress leader pointed out that the proposed amendment gives no priority to the prediction and prevention of disasters. He alleged that the amendment centralises the process of disaster management, has overlapping procedures, and concentrates power in the central government. He stressed that the confusing chain of command is bereft of urgency, delays response to disasters, and institutionalises inefficiency. Making a strong point against the centralisation of command, he suggested financial devolution to the states, greater autonomy in decision-making, and the inclusion of coastal erosion and heat waves in the definition of disaster management. He also suggested the inclusion of experts in the Committee of Disaster Management. He also advocated giving legal guarantees to people losing their family members and property during a calamity. He cited examples of landslides in Wayanad, floods in Chennai, and drought in Karnataka when he accused the Central Government of failing to respond to the demands of the states.
Putting forth his argument on the bill, a member of the Trinamool Congress, Kalyan Banerjee, charged that the proposed bill encroaches on the authority of the states and destroys the federal structure. He said it reduces the independence of the states in responding to calamities and increases central control over disaster relief funds. He added that the proposed setting up of the Urban Disaster Management Authority at the municipal level has no clarity of functioning and no definite route of coordination with the central authorities.