Gadkari, known to speak his mind, did not name the "vested interests" who are trying to scuttle the new law but said these are the people who are "opposed to transparency and computerisation in the highways sector".
"In India, 30 per cent of the driving licenses are bogus... There has been large-scale corruption in RTOs... Misconception was generated by those who will get affected due to transparency in the new legislation," the Minister told PTI in an interview here.
It would also overhaul the road transport and highways sector bringing in more transparency and curbing malpractices, Gadkari said while adding that the proposed legislation incorporates the best global practises and will curb road accidents. He pegged the annual loss to the economy due to accidents in India at close to 3 per cent of the GDP.
India sees nearly five lakh road accidents a year in which 1.5 lakh people die and another 3 lakh get crippled.
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"Not so many people die in war or terror attack or naxalite killing...Not even in epidemics... It gives me sleepless nights and I want to cut accidents by at least 50 per cent as early as possible," the Minister said.
According to Shipping Ministry estimate, Indian seafarers
constitute about 6 per cent of the world seafarer community, equally divided between navigation and engineering disciplines serving both Indian and foreign flag vessels.
On issues raised by some shipliners that under the current policy they have to pay seafarers their salaries at particular ports of call and the seafarer in turn transfers it to his NRI account, Gadkari said the issue will be taken up with RBI to assess if direct transfer of funds to the NRI account is possible.
Five largest seafarer suppliers in the globe include China, the Philippines, Indonesia, Russia and Ukraine.
Efforts are also on to bring in reforms in the model concession agreement besides dispute redressal mechanism, the minister added.