Standing Committee on Home Affairs explained

Standing Committee on Home Affairs
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Above:Department Related Standing Committee
Headerstyle:border-top: 2px solid #015843; border-bottom: 2px solid #015843;
Header:18th Lok Sabha
Subheader:18th Lok Sabha
Label3:Founded
Label4:Country
Data4: India
Header5:Leadership
Label6:Chaiperson
Data6:Radha Mohan Das Agarwal
Label7:Chairperson party
Data7:Bharatiya Janata Party
Label8:Appointer
Data8:Lok sabha Speaker
Header9:Structure
Label10:Seats
Data10:31
Lok Sabha : 21
Rajya Sabha : 10
Label11:Political Parties
Data11:










Label12:Election criteria
Data12:The members are elected every year from amongst its members of respective houses according to the principle of proportional representation.
Label13:Tenure
Data13:1 Year
Header14:Jurisdiction
Label15:Purpose
Data15:Legislative oversight of the defence policies and decision making of the Ministry of Defence (MOD)
Header18:Rules & Procedure
Label20:Applicable rules
Data20:Rule 331 C through N (page 122 - 125)
Fifth Schedule (page 158)-->

The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs (SCOHA) is a department related standing committee (DRSC) of selected members of parliament, constituted by the Parliament of India, for the purpose of legislative oversight of the domestic policy, internal security and decision making of the Ministry of Home Affairs. It is one of the 24 DRSCs that have been mandated with the onerous task of ministry specific oversight.

The committee currently is headed by MP Radha Mohan Das Agarwal.[1] [2]

Current composition

Each of the committees have 31 members – 21 from Lok Sabha and 10 from Rajya Sabha. These members are to be nominated by the Speaker of Lok Sabha or the Chairman of Rajya Sabha respectively. The term of office of these committees does not exceed one year. These committees are serviced either by Lok Sabha secretariat or the Rajya Sabha secretariat, depending on who has appointed the chairman of that committee.

Following are the members of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs Keys: = 31 members

Party
1Ashish DubeyJabalpur, Madhya PradeshBJP
2Satish Kumar GautamAligarh, Uttar Pradesh
3Naveen JindalKurukshetra, Haryana
4Jyotirmay Singh Mahato Purulia, West Bengal
5Kalaben DelkarDadra and Nagar Haveli
6B. Y. RaghavendraShimoga, Karnataka
7Vishnu Dayal RamPalamu, Jharkhand
8Jai ParkashHisar, HaryanaINC
9Sukhjinder Singh RandhawaGurdaspur, Punjab
10Muhammed Hamdulla SayeedLakshadweep
11Amrinder Singh Raja Warring
12Kakoli Ghosh DastidarBarasat, West BengalAITC
13Mala RoyKolkata Dakshin, West Bengal
14Kesineni ChinniVijayawada, Andhra PradeshTDP
15Krishna Prasad TennetiBapatla, Andhra Pradesh
16Dayanidhi MaranChennai Central, Tamil NaduDMK
17Anil DesaiMumbai South Central, MaharashtraSS(UBT)
18Dhairyasheel Sambhajirao ManeHatkanangle, MaharashtraSS
19Supriya SuleBaramati, MaharashtraNCP(SP)
20Chandrashekhar AzadNagina, Uttar PradeshASP(kR)
21Vacant
Notes
Party
1Radha Mohan Das AgarwalUttar PradeshBJP
2Nabam RebiaArunachal Pradesh
3Neeraj ShekharUttar Pradesh
4Samik BhattacharyaWest Bengal
5Ajay MakenKarnatakaINC
6Derek O'BrienWest BengalAITC
7Sanjay YadavBiharRJD
8Haris BeeranKeralaIUML
9G. K. VasanTamil NaduTMC
10Kapil SibalUttar PradeshIND

Comments and reports

Tek Fog

In January 2022, MP Derek O'Brien (Trinamool Congress) and a member of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs wrote to Anand Sharma, head of the committee to discuss the secret app "Tek Fog" that "has serious ramifications and could jeopardise national security". He wrote, "This application is capable of penetrating encrypted messaging platforms and secure social media conversations, in order to heavily manipulate and exploit narratives on said platforms."[3]

On 12 January, Congress leader and leader of the party in the Lok Sabha Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury also wrote to the chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs, Anand Sharma, asking the committee discuss the "Violative Software Application 'Tek Fog'", in their next meeting.[4]

The Parliamentary standing committee asked the Union Home Ministry to provide information about the 'Tek Fog' app that was allegedly used for manipulating social media trends. On 12 February, responding to the request, MoS for Electronics and Information Technology Rajeev Chandrasekhar said, "The ministry has searched for the app on all prominent app stores and APK stores and could not find so called app in any of these online stores."[5]

Police reforms

In 2022, the committee submitted to Rajya Sabha, its report titled "Police — Training, Modernisation and Reforms", the committee expressed concern about the low representation of women in police forces, at only 10.30%.

Chairpersons

Sr. No.NameTerm of officeTermsPolitical party(Alliance)<--
1Buta Singh1993-952INC
2No Public records found1995-983
3Kamal Chaudhary1998-991INC
4Laxminarayan Pandey1999-20023BJP
5Madan Lal Khurana2002-042
6Balasaheb Vikhe Patil2004-084INC
7Satpal Maharaj2008-114
8Raj Babbar2012-142
92014-173BJP
10Kalraj Mishra2017-192 -->
- 2019–Present 3INC

See also

References

  1. News: Initiate parliamentary probe into Tek Fog app: Trinamool . 7 January 2022 . The Hindu . 7 January 2022 . en-IN.
  2. News: Parliament Panels Reconstituted, Congress Leaders Retained As Chairmen . 8 January 2022 . NDTV.com . 10 October 2021.
  3. News: ‘Could Jeopardise National Security’: Derek O’Brien Wants Standing Committee To Discuss ‘Tek Fog’ . 6 January 2022 . The Wire . 6 January 2022.
  4. News: After Derek O'Brien, Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury Asks Standing Committee to Discuss 'Tek Fog' . 12 January 2022 . The Wire . 12 January 2022.
  5. News: Supreme Court global leader with 1.81L virtual hearings . 28 February 2022 . Tribuneindia News Service . 12 February 2022 . en.