Hukumdev Narayan Yadav (BJP) sought stringent rules to curb medical colleges from taking "huge" donations for admissions and demanded that people taking money should be put behind the bars.
Donations ranging from Rs 50 lakh to Rs 1 crore is demanded from students for medical college admissions, said, demanding CBI probe into these cases and putting the culprits behind bars. He also wanted amending the Medical Council Act to check such practices.
Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury (Cong) wanted the government to "consider having multiple time zones" in the country, saying many others like the US and Russia had such a system.
Observing that different time zones would help in saving on energy consumption as daylight is wasted now, he said the sun rises in Mumbai two hours after that in Kohima. In 1884, India had two time zones, Chowdhury contended.
Raising the issue of rapes and sexual assaults against women, P K Sreemathi Teacher (CPI-M) said the "government is not at all serious" in making efforts to prevent such incidents or extending help to the victims.
The government should look at setting up one-stop help centres for victims of sexual assaults in every district besides having fast-track courts in all states to hear the cases, she noted.
He demanded strengthening of disaster management activities, including installation of sensometers and doppler radars in the Himalayan region.
