Categories: Thiruvananthapuram

Steps to revoke 122 actions in Kerala

Thiruvananthapuram: The Legal Department has begun the procedure to revoke 122 actions imposed in the state for various purposes since 2008, on the recommendation of the 15th report on the state air reform commissions.
The Commission, in his report submitted to the government last month recommended to revoke as many as 218 actions that apply in the state, many of them were applied even before the establishment of the country.
The Legal Reform Commission has submitted the draft Kerala Saving and bill bill, 2021, to revoke this law.
The legal department later found that of the 218 recommended actions to revoke, as many as 96 actions were recommended to be revoked by a committee led by a leading legal expert V R Krishna Iyer in 2009 itself.
The Legal Department then told the cabinet that the procedure to revoke 96 actions as recommended by the Committee led by Krishna Iyer had begun, and the procedure to revoke 122 remaining actions could begin.
The cabinet on November 24, cleaned the proposal to revoke the remaining actions that had been recommended by the committee by excluding those recommended by the Krishna Iyer Committee where the Law Department still worked.
On the basis of cabinet decisions, the Law Department has begun the procedure to place the bill in the Assembly.
All 122 actions that are being revoked are amendments to acting for various actions in the state.
However, the actions that have been recommended by the Krishna Iyer Committee include some of those who can arouse interest in historical fans, including two actions that are passed on Travancore Istama, eight in Cochin which applies to Travancore and Cochin, 16 acts that apply to the former Malabar Regency is under state Madras and 10 stories that are forwarded after the country’s establishment.
It also contains as many as 59 amendment actions passed by 2007 in the state.
The actions of the pre-state formation era include the Madras Devadasis (Prevention of Dedication), which is a law imposed on October 9, 1947, as soon as the country becomes independent of the British rules that make it illegal to dedicate the girls, the girls Paliam proclamation was put in place by the Cochin government in 1935, which stated that all plantations under the Pteriam family (families of the Main Minister of Maharajas Cochin) were under the kingdom, prevention of cruelty towards the animal law eneciched in Cochin to stop cruelty of animals and rice supply and rice to the palace Travancore (blackouts of rights and liabilities), ACT, 1976, who abolished the obligations of the government to honor the order of 1949, without paying compensation to the palace.
Sequence 1949 said that as many as 4,000 rice paras, 110 paras from Njavara rice, and one-half paras from Oora rice was supplied to Travancore Palace every year for the use of former Maharaja and Palace, in a substitute for the land of Kandukrishi to the government.

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