swaccha bharath non-corrupt
TRANSCRIPT
Factors that led to rise of political corruption in India after
Independence:
o Nehru's tolerant attitude towards corruption.
o License Raj.
o Lack of accountability in Judiciary.
o Labor aristocracy.
o Mafia Raj (or Goonda Raj or Jungle Raj)
o Black money
o Malfunctioning bureaucracy
Income Tax. search on properties linked to Minister etc.
o Thursday, August 2017
Karnataka’s Energy Minister D. K. Sivakumar and his brother, D.K.
Suresh was under search by the Income Tax department on 2nd August
morning. In a coordinated early morning exercise, Income Tax Department
officials on Wednesday carried out a multi-city search on properties linked
to Energy Minister D. K. Sivakumar and his brother D.K. Suresh (a M.P.
from Bengaluru Rural). In continuation of the raids Income Tax officials are
carrying out search and seizure operations at over 60 locations on
Thursday. It is claimed that about Rs. 10 Crores were recovered.
o Saturday, August 5, 2017
Income Tax officials confront Shivkumar with documents
Searches are not yet over.
o Officials sought explanation over his assets and investments in
several businesses in Bharath and abroad. Questioning continued.
o Correlation with his 2013 election affidavit and the I-T returns he
filed since 2013 and documents and financial transactions
unearthed are the questions that have to be answered by him.
IT officials from Mysore reached the house of Chetan Narayan on B.M.
Road in Hassan late on Wednesday night and began searches. Search
operations were conducted at their residences, hotel, petrol pump and
other establishments.
On late Wednesday night, the house and properties of a businessman and
his family in Hassan were raided. The SBG Group, run by three brothers -
Sachin Narayan, Chetan Narayan and Prithvi Narayan, has been into real
estate, hotel and other industries. The family is said to have close ties with
leaders of both the Congress and the BJP.
***
Extent of corruption in Bharath o Sports sector: Match fixing, Commonwealth games screw-up,
Nepotism in IPL.
o Health sector: In 2008, World Bank said it had uncovered
serious acts of corruption in its five health projects in India
amounting to $500 million.
o Telecom sector: A Raja was recently sacked after a CAG
report said his ministry sold 2G licenses below market prices
costing India nearly $40 billion dollars.
o Software Services: The founder of Satyam Co, one of the top
service firms in India admitted he had falsely inflated profits for
years and resigned in Jan 2009.
o Defence sector: In the 1980’s, the then Prime Minister Rajiv
Gandhi and several other officials were accused of receiving
kickbacks from Swedish arms manufacturer AB Bofors for
winning a bid to supply India with 400 howitzers.
o Police sector: Indian police is largely inefficient and
unreformed. The police act of 1861 has remained unchanged
over the past 150 years.
o Real estate sector: Three of Maharashtra CM Ashok Chavan's
relatives were involved in Adarsh scam. In Bangalore, CM
Yeddyurappa is accused of allotting land to his relatives.
o Judiciary: In Jan 02, S.P Bharucha, then India's chief justice
said 20% of the higher judiciary might be corrupt. As of Feb
2006, 33635 cases were pending in the the Supreme court
and more than 3 million cases were pending in high courts.
*****
July 10, 2017: Book Extraction: Corruption in era of Liberalisation
Why scams are here to stay: Understanding Political Corruption in
India, N. Ram, Aleph, Rs. 395/-
Corruption is intractable, all pervasive, and multifarious. It is asking three
measures of land by its measure, coming like a puny Vamana and when
you agree to give like Bali in your arrogance, the universe is measured out
in two steps by becoming Trivikrama and on your head lands the foot that
sends you down before you say ‘my foot!’
“In 1987-1988, without much forewarning, we at The Hindu found
ourselves in the deep end, investigating grand corruption of a kind that
India had not seen before,” writes N. Ram, chairman of Kasturi & Sons Ltd.,
and former editor-in-chief of The Hindu and Frontline, in his new book, ‘Why
Scams Are Here to Stay: Understanding Political Corruption in India’.
Drawing on the experience of investigating Bofors, modern India’s defining
corruption scandal; he throws a spotlight on the intractability of corruption
— in its pervasiveness, omnipresence, and multifariousness — under the
prevailing circumstances in India, which is to say that without making deep-
going and radical changes to India’s political economy it will not be possible
to prevent and eliminate corruption. Yet, he argues counter-intuitively,
combating corruption is decidedly a challenge of the here and now. An
excerpt:
Gunnar Myrdal even came up with a ‘sketch’ of a theory of corruption in
South Asia by offering some ‘reasonable, though quite tentative’ questions to
be explored and hypotheses to be tested. These questions and hypotheses
attempted to relate corruption in South Asian countries to general socio-
economic conditions, to the stage of development, and especially to
institutional and attitudinal problems. But Myrdal’s sketch of a theory of
corruption in South Asia was ahistorical in one critical respect: it failed to
acknowledge the extent to which the colonial power had participated in and
nurtured the corruption, and the conditions engendering corruption, that free
India inherited.
Interestingly, while Myrdal saw the presence of corruption in South
Asian countries in somewhat static terms, as a legacy from pre-capitalist,
traditional society, he related the increase in corruption to the processes of
dynamic change in the social system, offering the insight that many of the
changes that had occurred afforded ‘greater incentives as well as greater
opportunities for corruption’. Most significantly, he called attention to the
active role of the business world in promoting corruption among politicians
and administrators.
Socio-economically and politically, India is a very different country
from the one Myrdal encountered during the decade he researched and
wrote Asian Drama (1968). But his observation that many of the dynamic
changes in the social system had enabled corruption on a bigger scale
proved prophetic for the post-1991 era of economic liberalization and
accelerated pursuit of neo-liberal policies. It is now well established that the
facts of corruption, that is, its magnitude, spread, and effects in the polity
and society, have increased exponentially over the past quarter century.
While the folklore has kept in step, the anti-corruption arrangements and
actions have been limping a long way behind.
The past decade-and-a-half has seen a spectacular outbreak of
corruption scandals, big-ticket, medium-sized, and relatively small. With its
tentacles spreading to virtually every branch of the Indian state and to key
sectors of the economy, and to the news media, corruption’s salience in
India’s political economy and public policy discourse has never been
higher.
28 scams and counting
For the period 2000-2013, Sandip Sukhtankar and Milan Vaishnav,
researchers in political economy, have come up with a shortlist of twenty-
eight scams, involving hundreds of billions of dollars, from the lists
compiled by five news outlets. They calculate that for this list of early
twenty-first century corruption scandals, ‘the mean scam “value” was Rs.
36,000 crore, and the median Rs. 12,000 crore. A major omission from this
shortlist is Vyapam, the mega-scam in BJP-ruled Madhya Pradesh.
There was a time when the stock explanation for corruption in India
was the ‘permit-licence-quota raj’— virtually everything could be attributed
to it. The prediction offered by a legion of neo-liberal economists and
political theorists was that deregulation and liberalization would lead to the
prevention, containment, and eventual elimination of corruption. Precisely
the opposite has happened: liberalization has ushered in corruption in a
much greater variety of forms and on an unimaginably greater scale than
anything seen under the so-called licence raj.
The interesting question is why and various answers have been put
forward by scholars and policymakers. The essential neo-liberal answer is
that many vestiges of the licence raj remain, enforcement capacity is still
weak, and the reform process needs to be given more time to bring down
the level of corruption. The evidence clearly and decisively goes against
such ideologically led reasoning that often sounds like casuistry. The real
explanation for the exponential increase in corruption in the era of
liberalization and high economic growth must necessarily be complex and
nuanced and, as we will see, it is to be found deep in the heart and entrails
of India’s political economy as it has evolved over the past quarter century.
The short answer to the question is that with deregulation and
liberalization, the state has played a different kind of role to the one it
played earlier. It provided access to scarce public resources as part of a
process of promoting private sector-led growth at any cost. State supported
without inhibition the omnipresence and play of private interests within the
public sphere. There is plenty of evidence to show that corruption tends to
be greater when pro-business strategies of governments bring on or
facilitate crony capitalism and ‘when there is a state-engineered
redistribution of wealth in favour of a few and at the explicit or implicit
expense of the many’.
A political reckoning over burgeoning levels of corruption was due
and it took place with certain inevitability. Given the unprecedented levels
of corruption witnessed over the previous decade, it was no surprise that
the issue figured prominently in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections and was
responsible, in no small measure, for the rout of the Congress-led United
Progressive Alliance.
A political reckoning over burgeoning levels of corruption was due
and it took place with a certain inevitability. Given the unprecedented levels
of corruption witnessed over the previous decade, it was no surprise that
the issue figured prominently in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections and was
responsible, in no small measure, for the rout of the Congress-led United
Progressive Alliance.
N. Ram [Author of a book reviewed above]
BLACK MONEY
o Unaccounted money.
o India's underground economy today is estimated to be about half of
country's GDP.
o Global financial Integrity Study in 2006 showed that the average
amount stashed away from India annually during 2002-06 is $27.3
billion (about 136,466 crore).
o External tax havens like Switzerland are only part of the problem.
o Its extremely common in India to skip that bill at the grocery store to
escape sales tax.
o Extremely common in India to evade income taxes.
o Unclear laws in this matter and lack of political will make it easy for
culprits to get away.
o Dawood Ibrahim is believed to be responsible for the flow of large
amounts of hawala money into Mumbai stock market.
o Black money is one of the chief sources of funding for terrorists.
Political corruption
o Misuse of power by government officials for their private gain.
o Various forms: Bribery, influence peddling, patronage, nepotism,
embezzlement, electoral fraud, kickbacks, so on.
o Political corruption - trickles down to every aspect of the society.
o Political corruption is not new. Cultures all around the world have
suffered with people in power abusing their power.
o Political corruption was the main reason behind the fall of Roman
empire, triggered French revolution and started October revolution in
Russia.
o Any kind of government intervention is a recipe for political corruption.
o The history of independent India is rampant with cases of political
corruption:
o Jeep scandal (1948), Mudgal case (1951), Mundra deals (1957-58),
Malaviya Sirajuddin scandal (1963), Pratap Singh Kairon case (1963)
to name some early few.
o As Indian economy grows at a rapid pace, the stakes have got higher
and the money involved in scams have blown up to gargantuan
proportions.
Corruption in Nehru era
It was believed that Nehru had a tolerant attitude towards corruption in his
ranks.
o A.D Gorwala, a civil servant says in his report he submitted to Govt
of India in 1951 - "Quite a few of Nehru's ministers were corrupt and
it was common knowledge".
o The Santhanam committee, appointed by the Govt. in 1962 to
examine corruption said " There is widespread impression that failure
of integrity is not uncommon among ministers and that some
ministers, who have held office during the last sixteen years have
enriched themselves illegitimately, obtained good jobs for their sons
and relations through nepotism and have reaped other advantages
inconsistent with any notion of purity in public life."
o Comments of Nehru on charges against Pratap Singh Kairon - “The
question thus arises as to whether the chief minister is compelled to
resign because of adverse findings on some questions of fact by
Supreme Court. The ministers are collectively responsible to the
legislature. Therefore, the matter was one, which concerned the
assembly. As a rule therefore, the question of removing a minister
would not arise unless the legislature expressed its wish by a
majority vote.”
o This attitude of tolerance towards corruption was further
institutionalized by Indira Gandhi. She held the posts of both Prime
minister and Party president and controlled the party funds. This
gave birth to money power in politics.
o Corruption cases like Fairfax, HBJ Pipeline, and HDW Submarine
deal came up since then. The famous Bofors deal is well known.
o Narsimha Rao was the first Prime Minister being prosecuted in
corruption charges. Cases like Rs.2500 crore -Airbus A-320 deal with
France involving kickback (1990), Harshad Mehta security scam
(1992), Gold Star Steel and Alloys controversy (1992), JMM bribery
case, Hawala scam of Rs. 65 crore and Urea scam (1996) also came
up during the period of Narsimha Rao Government.
o So long the BJP was in opposition, it was by and large known as a
party with moral integrity, but when it aligned with the political leaders
with shady background for the sake of power, the malady of
corruption infected this party too. BJP party secretary Bangaru
Laxman was caught on tape by tehelka.com accepting bribes and led
to the resignation of defense minister George Fernandes in 2001.
Labour Aristocracy
"Not getting fired is my birthright and i shall have it"
Socialist policies of Nehruvian Congress gave rise to conservative labour
laws which demonise industry owners and over-protect labourers.
- Strikes and HartaaLs became commonplace in the country.
- There was a time when having a government job was a hard requirement
for many parents in their futuregroom.
- Transfer the inefficient worker, not fire him.
- There was this case of Uttam Nakate, who was caught napping in his
office, but the company couldn’t fire him because of tough labour laws. He
went to court and it took 20 years for the company to the rights to fire
him.
- "Aside from highlighting the problem of India's lethargic legal system,
Uttam's case dramatizes how the country's labor laws actually reduce
employment, by making employers afraid to hire workers in the first place.
The rules protect existing unionized workers at the expense of everyone
else." - Gurcharan Das (former CEO of P&G)
- Too many laws: In India there are 45 labour laws at the national level and
nearly 150 laws at the state level. Ideal recipe for delays and red tape.
- "In 2004, there were 482 cases of major work stoppages, resulting in 15
million human days of work loss" - World Bank
- Short sighted laws. Situation 'A' is bad - so write a law to ban situation 'A'.
Not looking at the big picture.
- Finally all disputes end up in labour courts which are too slow to lead to
any speedy resolution – huge handicap in today's fast paced global
economy.
Corruption in India_ ‘an old article’ Andrew Sanchez
The momentum of last year’s hunger strike by the anti-corruption campaigner
Kisan ‘Anna’ Hazare lately saw India’s parliament wrestling with the
formation of a national corruption ombudsman. Hazare’s campaign rested
upon the proposition that the democratic ideals with which the Indian state
was formed in 1947 were all too often subverted by the self-interest of public
servants.
Hazare’s supporters argued that this process had two primary effects.
First, corruption allowed wealthier citizens to access resources and
preferential state treatment to which they were not entitled. Second,
corruption constituted a drain on the coffers of many ordinary Indians, in the
form of demands for bribes by state functionaries, without which their
services could not necessarily be procured. Hazare’s formulation was largely
correct, and if popular support for his campaign was any indication, he had
articulated a political frustration with bribery that was unique in spanning the
regional, ethnic and religious divisions of Indian society. However, the
discontent which Hazare’s movement expressed related to a corruption that
was broader than bribery alone. ‘Corruption’ in this context encompasses a
more pernicious subversion of the Indian state that had seen substantial
numbers of often violent career criminals enter parliament since the 1970s,
and had consequently weakened popular faith in governmental institutions.
The current relationship between politics and criminality was a
consequence of a culture of entrepreneurial corruption that adhered to Indian
public office. While parliamentary service remained such a lucrative
profession, it woud continue to attract individuals whose ambitions extend
beyond the confines of their position, and whose means of satisfying them
could include coercion.
The extent to which Hazare would find satisfaction in India’s corruption
ombudsman depended in the first instance on whether the ‘Lokpal’ (‘protector
of the people’) bill to which it relates was ever enacted; the bill was stalled in
the upper house of the Indian parliament and may never be fully realised.
However, should the bill be passed, it was unlikely that the scrutiny of an
ombudsman alone can provide the framework necessary to combat
corruption at the higher reaches of the Indian state. The task required a
substantial overhaul of the wider legislation that currently protected the most
powerful public servants who could abuse their positions, and a real
engagement with the influence of violence and organised crime on national
politics.
Anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International ranked the
national perception of corruption in India to be 87th highest in the world (in an
index of 182 positions). While many nations fared better than India in this
ranking, many evidently fared much worse, including regional neighbours
Pakistan and Bangladesh. However, the real significance of perceptions of
corruption did not lie in the extent to which phenomena such as bribery were
perceived to be prevalent across society. A more important assessment
was of how differing forms of corruption were deemed to be concentrated at
different levels of the state, and whether such practices were seen as integral
to the consolidation of power.
In India, public scandals of the previous twenty years, which link
numerous elected politicians and even government ministers to repeated
acts of parliamentary corruption, embezzlement, land seizure, blackmail,
extortion, kidnap and murder, served to erode the assumption of legitimate
political authority and the efficacy of the ballot box.
While bribery in its many forms undoubtedly impedes the proper
functioning of institutions, the preponderance of criminal politicians corrupts
the very notion of the accountable and democratic state on which the idea of
India rests.
The popular perception of Indian political criminality was well
substantiated by the available data. In the then Indian parliament, of the 543
elected representatives of the lower house, 158 (29 percent) were charged
with a criminal offence. More shockingly still, seventy four (14 percent) were
charged with crimes in the most serious category of offence, comprised of
murder, rape, extortion, banditry and theft. While it was problematic to draw a
simple relationship between criminal charges and actual guilt, it is apparent
that politicians fall foul of the law far more frequently than almost any other
section of Indian society, posing the pertinent question of why particular
types of people are so often attracted to a political career.
Alternatively, though less plausibly, one could ask why it was that politicians
were so disproportionately targeted for spurious criminal investigations.
The distribution of criminal charges within the Indian parliament is weighted
towards MPs representing the smaller parties, whose support bases rely
upon the politics of caste and ethno-regionalism.
Among the two major parties, the Congress Party, whose ideology was
a secular state-socialism, had 5 percent of its 205 MPs currently facing
charges, while the Bharatiya Janata Party, representing a broad platform of
Hindu nationalism, saw 16 percent of its 116 MPs charged. At the other end
of the spectrum, the regional Samajwadi and Bahujan Samaj parties, who
predominantly represented the interests of untouchable castes, had 60
percent of their MPs also charged. Other ethno-regional parties fared
similarly poorly. Interrogating this phenomenon better substantiated the
contexts in which criminals were likely to enter Indian politics.
Many of the Indian political parties strongly associated with criminality
had their support bases in a vast northern swath of the country, running from
the state of Haryana in the centre west, across Uttar Pradesh to the eastern
states of Bihar and Jharkhand. Obscuring the understanding of political
criminality in these states was a popular national perception of this region as
a violent, culturally conservative backwater, plagued by poverty and
communalism. That some of the politicians who represented these
States should be criminal despots was often said to express the particular
troubles and cultural dispositions of the region. In reality, the emergence of
political criminality in this part of India related to the use of political violence
by the central Government from the 1970s, and the present relationship
between provincial criminal politicians and their ostensibly more legitimate
counterparts was closer than one would suspect. In explaining the rise of
India’s criminal politicians, one might consider the possibility that a new type
of charismatic political leader emerged during the 1970s that broke with the
‘statesman’ model of the Congress Party, and was valued for their
willingness to dirty their hands on behalf of their constituents. Certainly,
a profound change overtook political leadership during this period, as
violence began to be valued more highly by certain sections of the electorate,
particularly within ethno-regional movements. However, the widespread
incorporation of criminality into Indian politics stemmed apparently first time
from the use of coercion during Indira Gandhi’s ‘State of Emergency’ from
June 1975 to March 1977.
During this period, the Congress Party embarked upon a dictatorship,
ostensibly to secure national unity in the midst of parliamentary turmoil.
The ‘emergency’ saw many civil liberties suspended and political dissent
silenced through widespread arrest and coercion, a significant proportion of
which was conducted by criminal enforcers at the behest of the state. The
Congress Party’s use of violence made criminal enforcers an integral
element of political control in many areas of the nation; enforcers who
then subsequently used state connections and increased economic power to
consolidate their own positions. Dire ethical failings aside, the practical flaw
of the Congress’ use of violence lay in their failure to anticipate that the
criminals which they courted would remain part of the political landscape long
after their immediate usefulness had been exhausted. The most successful
of these criminals amassed sufficient power and influence to enter parliament
themselves, where the status of their office could further their enterprises.
Subsequent concentration of India’s criminal politicians in quite particular
areas of the nation might be explained with reference to the political
economies of the regions concerned.
Across Haryana, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, post-independence rural relations
had been characterized by a progressively open state of conflict between
lower-caste tenants and their upper-caste landlords. In this climate, the use
of politically orchestrated violence was increasingly salient, and charismatic
criminal leadership was more likely to flourish. In Bihar, criminal authority
was further entrenched by 1975’s statewide alcohol prohibition, which
created a lucrative market for bootlegged liquor.
Regional criminal organisations prospered in the 1970s by providing
coercive political services and fulfilling black market demands for consumer
goods. These organisations eventually diversified into labour contracting,
haulage, mineral extraction, metal trading and waste disposal as the region’s
industrial sectors expanded throughout the 1980s. During the 1990s, the
power of regional criminal politicians received a further boost from the centre,
as a series of weak coalition governments allowed the smaller parties on
which they were dependent to wield a disproportionate level of power in
parliamentary votes. It is during this period that the Congress Party became
embroiled in the ‘bribes for votes’ scandal, which saw Prime Minster
Narashima Rao convicted of corruption, and Sibu Soren, the head of the
ethno-regional Jharkhand Mukti Morcha Party, convicted for the directly
related murder of an alleged blackmailer.
It was not coincidental that the areas of the nation in which political
authority then enjoyed the least confidence (namely Bihar, Jharkhand and
Uttar Pradesh) were also those regions which afforded political
entrepreneurs some of the greatest economic opportunities. This was
through land seizures, industrial contracting, racketeering and labour
brokerage. The penetration of known criminals into parliament had its
clearest origins in the emergency’s use of applied violence.
One might also conclude that the class and ethnic conflicts of particular
regions explained why violence initially became a feature of charismatic
leadership in Indian politics.
However, it was the capacity of parliament to enable the consolidation
of personal power that presently explained the allure of a political career to
criminals, as well as the Indian electorate’s increasingly strident denunciation
of such forms of authority.
The challenge presently facing the Indian state was to restore public
confidence in the morality and capacity of the nation’s politicians, by ensuring
that criminals found it harder to gain entry to a potentially lucrative
parliamentary career. Meeting this challenge required an as yet absent
governmental will to reform the legislation that enabled those charged with
serious offences to stand for office, and to avoid future criminal investigation
once elected. The then governmental response to Hazare’s campaign
seemed encouraging, and was at the very least testament to the power of a
well-informed citizenry to press its demands upon the state. However, one
must doubt the depth and perhaps the sincerity with which the Indian
parliament presently searched its collective soul. Neither the issues raised by
Hazare or their proposed remedies were new. On the contrary, the corruption
and criminalisation of politics had been the subject of numerous
governmental commissions since the 1960s, most of which had reached the
same conclusions as Hazare, and had vainly made almost identical
suggestions for reform to those that were presently under discussion.
For example, the first Indian Committee on the Prevention of Corruption
reported its findings as early as March 1964, having been convened to
investigate a perceived rise in ministerial corruption since independence. The
committee concluded that India’s legislative framework was ill equipped to
deal with political corruption, and outlined a procedure whereby complaints
against members of parliament could be investigated by an independent
committee, prior to police referral. If the 1964 committee’s suggestions seem
well suited to the then political climate, it was because they were never acted
upon and the legislative failings which they identified have remained largely
unaddressed for the previous four decades. Likewise, the ‘Lokpal’ bill,
currently so fiercely debated, had a long and faltering ancestry in Indian
politics. Between 1969 and 1998, six separate Lokpal bills had been passed
in India, only to lapse with the dissolution of parliament. What the historical
farce of the Lokpal bills suggested was that the consistency with which
independent enquiries diagnose and prescribe against political corruption in
India, was matched only by the uniformity with which their activities were
ignored or obfuscated by the parliament. The fate of proposals directed more
specifically at flagrantly criminal acts of political corruption was worse still.
The 2010 background paper on electoral reforms prepared by the Indian
Election Commission had revisited two unheeded recommendations with
which to combat the criminalisation of Indian politics. Both of these were first
proposed in 2004. The Commission advised that prospective candidates for
the lower house of the Indian parliament be required to declare all previous
convictions, pending criminal cases and assets prior to standing. It
suggested that the withholding of such information should be made
punishable by a minimum of two years imprisonment. The commission
recommended disqualification for all candidates against whom charges had
been brought at least six months prior to election for the most serious
category of offences. While a number of the Committee’s wider
recommendations (regarding restrictions on the publication of exit poll results
and the closer scrutiny of deposit monies) had been enacted, the bulk of
suggestions that would curtail the entry of criminals into parliament had yet to
find favour.
The will to restrict the entry of criminals into politics had to date not
been present in any Indian government, and it was sensible to question the
likely effectiveness of a corruption ombudsman whose architects are
a parliament composed of such a high number of suspected criminals.
Furthermore, the tenacity and success with which the prosecution of political
corruption will be able to proceed in the future required the redress of a
number of substantial legislative failings. These included inadequate
provisions for commissions of inquiry, courts and investigative bodies
such as the Central Bureau of Investigation that are open to nepotistic
appointments, and a legislative position of public officials that places them
beyond the scope of some forms of legal scrutiny.
Whether the Lokpal bill would be passed, and its associated ombudsman
proven effective remained to be seen. The bill’s critics argued quite
reasonably that the omniscient scrutiny of a central ombudsman potentially
trades one form of despotism for another, and it is prudent to ask whether the
commission can itself remain immune from corruption, even if the institution
were theoretically powerful.
Certainly, many of the proposals in Hazare’s original bill had been
considerably diluted in the version presented before parliament and the
composition of the ombudsman would be a matter of intense scrutiny in
coming months. As admirable as Hazare’s campaign had been, the wider
struggle against state corruption in India was unlikely to be fulfilled by the
Lokpal alone.
In addition to the Election Commission’s suggestions to broaden the
disqualification of criminal electoral candidates, at least three major reforms
were necessary to forestall India’s further slide into institutional criminality.
First, the state needed to address the substantial legislative failings
surrounding the pursuit of judicial and political corruption, which presently
grant public officials inexplicable immunity from prosecution in a bewildering
array of contexts. In short, powerful public officials must be not only liable
to public scrutiny, but also subject to the same forms and extent of
punishment as the citizenry.
Second, the state must endeavour to create a more transparent culture
of business, through a rigorous and systematic
enquiry into the context and financing of corporate mergers, the sale and
development of land, and the securing of contracts for the supply of labour,
goods and services. The chief avenues by which corrupt politicians presently
find their business profitable must be subject to far greater attention.
Third, the effectiveness of violent coercion by political authorities must
be curbed by strengthening and rehabilitating India’s law enforcement
agencies, which presently suffer from their own crisis of public confidence
owing to perceptions of corruption and institutional incompetence. If wielded
by the state at all, the use of violence must be the preserve of an
accountable and publicly trusted judiciary and not of political autocrats.
The lack of faith in state institutions, and the popular suspicion that
power is frequently derived from criminality, invites a critical reading of India’s
rise to superpower status. The global authority which the nation is likely to
wield in coming years is only to be lauded if power and prosperity is
distributed more evenly within India itself: a challenge which requires a
serious engagement with the problems of state corruption. Whilst the task
facing the Indian state is indeed substantial, the recent popular outcry shows
that the country is rich in the popular will to enact such reforms.
***
A number of factors explain this growing emphasis on fighting
corruption. Expansion and consolidation of democracy at the grassroots level
has enabled citizens to use the vote and new-found civil liberties to confront
corruption, prompting leaders and opposition figures to show a stronger anti-
corruption commitment. Internationally, since the end of the Cold War, donor
governments have focused less on ideological grounds for foreign assistance
and concentrated more on trade and development, both of which are
undermined by corruption. Countries with high levels of corruption, like India,
have found themselves less able to attract investment and aid in a
competitive global market. At the same time, business within the country has
faced ever stiffer competition with the gobalization of trade and capital
markets, and has become less willing to tolerate the expense and risk
associated with corruption.
Anti-corruption strategies are not simply policies that can be planned in
advance and isolation, but often a set of subtler insights that can be
developed only in conjunction with citizen participation.
Combating corruption is, therefore, not just a matter of making laws
and creating institutions, but rather it is deeply rooted in the activities of the
civil society itself.
Compulsions of electoral politics in independent India changed untainted
corruption free governance and the administrative as well as the police and
judicial services came to be charged with colluding with the political
leadership to indulge in systemic corruption, making a mockery of democratic
governance.
The fading away of the Gandhian and Nehruvian era of principled
politics and the emergence of new politics the keynote of which was
amorality happened in India. India’s experience with corruption has
shown that laws, rules, regulations, procedures and methods of transaction
of government business, however sound and excellent cannot by themselves
ensure effective and transparent administration if the political and
administrative leadership entrusted with their enforcement fails to do so and
abuses its powers for personal gain.