An insurance ad THE PROMULGATION of the Public Liability Insurance Act (PLI) -- to ensure that victims of chemical accidents get quick compensation -- is brewing into a controversy with public sector enterprises reluctant to take out policies under the new scheme.Under this law, insurance cover of a maximum of Rs five crore per accident or Rs 15 crore in a year has to be taken by all companies dealing with toxic, explosive, reactive or inflammable substances. A defaulter faces a penalty of six years' imprisonment or a fine of Rs one lakh, or both.
While over 1100 private industries have reportedly taken out policies, public sector companies are taking cover behind an exemption clause which calls for them to otherwise create a quick-compensation fund. But not one public sector company has taken a policy or constituted the fund.
Meanwhile, the government has introduced a bill to establish a national environment tribunal to decide cases related to industrial accidents. The bill affirms the principle of "strict civil liability." Any potentially dangerous industry would have to ensure safety to the people living nearby. The three-member tribunal will hear cases arising out of the PLI act. But with the public sector as yet left out, these well-intentioned moves may just not be enough.
O
P
E
N
IT HAPPENS ONLY IN INDIA,
GREAT JOB MR. PARMAR
SALUTE YOU
it is good to eat as many as vegetables and fruits (totally vegetarian), but my aurvedic doctor asked me to stop eating every...
Standard texts mention perepheral role of nutrition in therapy of tuberculosis.Perhaps this is done to emphasise the role of...