Key Points

The Rajasthan Assembly's Monsoon Session will begin on September 1, with the Anti-Conversion Bill expected to be a key focus. Speaker Vasudev Devnani has reviewed preparations ahead of the all-party meeting before the session. The Opposition plans to challenge the government on issues like the Jhalawar school tragedy and delayed education reforms. Pending Bills, including coaching center regulations, may finally see progress after High Court scrutiny.

Key Points: Rajasthan Assembly Monsoon Session Begins Sep 1 With Anti-Conversion Bill

  • Monsoon Session to run 7-10 days with pending Bills on agenda
  • Opposition to grill govt on Jhalawar school tragedy
  • Anti-Conversion Bill with strict penalties set for approval
  • Coaching Regulation Bill delayed after High Court criticism
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Rajasthan Assembly's Monsoon Session to begin on Sep 1; anti-conversion Bill likely on agenda

Rajasthan Assembly's Monsoon Session starts Sep 1, likely to pass Anti-Conversion Bill & address pending coaching regulation reforms amid opposition scrutiny.

"The long-pending Anti-Conversion Bill is likely to be passed this session – Law Minister"

Jaipur, Aug 12

The Monsoon Session of the Rajasthan Legislative Assembly will commence on September 1. Governor Haribhau Bagde has issued the notification to convene the session, after which the Assembly Secretariat has begun sending formal notices to all MLAs.

Speaker Vasudev Devnani has reviewed preparations for the session. Before the session opens, Speaker Devnani will hold an all-party meeting, said officials.

The session is expected to run for 7 to 10 days, with the final schedule to be decided in the Business Advisory Committee (BAC) meeting.

The Budget Session concluded on March 24, and under legislative rules, a session must be convened within six months— making this session necessary before the end of September.

The long-pending Anti-Conversion Bill, first introduced on February 3 during the Budget Session but left undiscussed, is likely to be passed. The Law Minister recently indicated the government’s intent to get it through. The Bill includes stringent provisions and penalties for forced religious conversions.

The Select Committee’s report on the Rajasthan Coaching Regulation Bill is also due and could be cleared this session, especially after the High Court’s criticism of delays.

In total, four Bills from the Budget Session remain pending, three of which are with the Select Committee: Rajasthan Coaching Centre Regulation Bill, Rajasthan Land Revenue (Amendment) Bill and Rajasthan Groundwater Authority Bill.

The Opposition Congress is set to corner the government on multiple issues, including law and order, disaster management, public transport, and the state of schools and hospitals.

The recent Jhalawar school accident tragedy in which a building collapse claimed the lives of 7 children of the school, is also expected to be a major flashpoint, with the state Education Minister Madan Dilawar likely to face tough questioning, as the Opposition has been demanding his resignation over the issue.

The Education Department had earlier submitted a proposal for repairing 8,000 schools, but only 2,000 were selected due to budget constraints. While Rs 80 crore was sanctioned last year, a proposal worth Rs 175 crore for the current year is still awaiting clearance.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Why is the government prioritizing anti-conversion bill when our schools are collapsing? 7 innocent lives lost in Jhalawar and only 2000 schools repaired out of 8000? Shameful! Education should be top priority, not divisive politics.
A
Arjun K
As a parent, I'm terrified sending my kids to government schools. The Jhalawar incident shows complete negligence. ₹80 crore is peanuts when children's lives are at stake. Minister should resign if he can't ensure basic safety!
S
Sarah B
The coaching regulation bill is long overdue. Rajasthan's coaching mafia exploits students with false promises. Hope they implement strict guidelines on fees and infrastructure. Education system needs complete overhaul.
V
Vikram M
Typical political drama before elections! They remember all pending bills now. Where was this urgency for past 4 years? Groundwater bill is crucial for farmers but gets delayed while controversial bills get priority. Shame!
K
Kavya N
Both Congress and BJP playing politics over dead children instead of fixing the system. My sister teaches in a govt school - buildings have cracks but no repairs. ₹175 crore proposal pending while they waste money on ads and rallies!

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