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Govt to Push Sports Bill, Extend Manipur Rule

New Delhi: Among the first two weeks of the ongoing monsoment session of the parliament on a request for a discussion on the special intensive revision of the opposition (secret), the government listed a series of invoices and will force its transitions from the beginning of Monday to eliminate the legislative business in the coming days.

According to a key government official, if deductions continue to prevent the government’s agenda in parliament, it will force the key bills to pass despite DIN.

The government will force a key sports bill at Lok Sabha on Monday. The Lower EV took into account the National Sports Governance Law, which foresees more transparency in the functioning of sports organs.

Another bill listed for evaluation and transition in Lok Sabha is the National Doping Anti (Amendment) invoice.

Rajya Sabha listed a decision to be valid for a passage on Monday to extend the rule of the president in Manipur from Union Interior Minister Ammit Shah.

Union Interior Minister Amit Shah called on the meeting of Western Bengal MPs on Monday. Trinamul Congress President and Western Bengal Prime Minister Mamata Bannerjee planned a meeting with his party to discuss ways to deal with problems with Bengal, except Parliament and Sir.

Apart from a two -day debate about the expensive terrorist attack in both Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha, the special intense protests in Bihar fired the voice protests from the opposition parties, and since the Monsoon session started on July 21, the parliamentary trials have been something other than a demolition.

The Indian block, which is frequently spoken in different sounds in previous sessions, joined the rankings, claiming that it aimed to remove voters who sympathize with the agenda of the election commission and to increase the expectations of the national democratic alliance led by BJP.

The EC said it would present a national exercise to “protect” the integrity of selection rolls to allow appropriate voters to be allowed to vote. Rahul Gandhi accused the opposition’s Lok Sabha leader EC of “voting Chori” (vote theft) and strongly criticized the survey organ.

EC, on Saturday, said in a statement, Mr. Gandhi’s “fundamental, unfounded and misleading” allegations rejected.

While the government draws little attention to the request for a discussion about the Sir in Parliament, the opposition pushes repeated and repeated postponement in its protest in Parliament.

Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju recently said that a senior congress leader Balram Jakhar, a Lok Sabha speaker between 1980 and 1989, could not process a constitutional organ such as EC to propose the government’s request for the opposition’s request.

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