Tuesday, August 30, 2011

The absent elders

On 27th August, 2011, a historic debate took place in the Parliament. Bowing to the voice of the aam aadmi, the Parliament discussed and debated the 3 issues referred to it by the government  on the insistence of the people ----- inclusion of lower bureaucracy in the Lokpal's ambit, Citizens Charter and redress of public grievances, and institutionalisation of Lokayuktas. Here is the Attendance Record for Rajya Sabha ----


MP's  Name                        Status (1 present 0 Absent)


Murli Deora
1
Saif-ud-Din Soz 1
Mohsina Kidwai 1
Rishang Keishing 1
Janardan Dwivedi 1
Birender Singh 1
Narendra Budania 1
Prabha Thakur 1
Viplove Thakur 1
Alka Balram Kshatriya 1
Parvez Hashmi 1
Shadi Lal Batra 1
Naznin Faruque 1
Karan Singh 1
Ahmed Patel 1
P.J. Kurien 1
Oscar Fernandes 1
M.S. Gill 1
Mani Shankar Aiyar 1
Nandi Yellaiah 1
Mabel Rebello 1
Mukut Mithi 1
Satish Kumar Sharma 1
Satyavrat Chaturvedi 1
E.M. Sudarsana Natchiappan 1
Vijay Jawaharlal Darda 1
Rama Chandra Khuntia 1
Raashid Alvi 1
V. Hanumantha Rao 1
Mohammad Shafi 1
Ram Prakash 1
Husain Dalwai 1
Abhishek Manu Singhvi 1
Jesudasu Seelam 1
T. Ratna Bai 1
Vijaylaxmi Sadho 1
Anil H. Lad 1
Ishwar Singh 1
Mohd. Ali Khan 1
Dhiraj Prasad Sahu 1
Ashk Ali Tak 1
Motilal Vora 1
Tiruchi Siva 1
Tariq Anwar 1
Prem Chand Gupta 1
D. Raja 1
Mohan Singh 1
Govindrao Wamanrao Adik 1
Jabir Husain 1
Mahendra Prasad 1
Rajniti Prasad 1
Ram Vilas Paswan 1
K.P. Ramalingam 1
Mangala Kisan 1
H.K. Dua 1
Shobhana Bhartia 1
M.S. Swaminathan 1
Kapila Vatsyayan 1
Ram Kripal Yadav 1
Janardhan Waghmare 1
Vasanthi Stanley 1
Renubala Pradhan 1
O.T. Lepcha 1
Thomas Sangma 1
Ishwarlal Shankarlal Jain 1
Ranjitsinh Vijaysinh Mohite-Patil 1
S. Thangavelu 1
Mohammed Adeeb 1
R.C. Singh 1
Sitaram Yechury 1
Shivanand Tiwari 1
Satish Chandra Misra 1
Ram Gopal Yadav 1
N. K. Singh 1
V. Maitreyan 1
Ali Anwar Ansari 1
Akhilesh Das Gupta 1
Rajaram 1
Veer Singh 1
S.P. Singh Baghel 1
Naresh Chandra Agrawal 1
M.V. Mysura Reddy 1
K.N. Balagopal 1
Nandamuri Harikrishna 1
Jai Prakash 1
Ganga Charan 1
Brijlal Khabri 1
Parimal Nathwani 1
Jugul Kishore 1
Avtar Singh Karimpuri 1
Ambeth Rajan 1
Ahmad Saeed Malihabadi 1
Sabir Ali 1
Jharna Das Baidya 1
T.N. Seema 1
M.P. Achuthan 1
Veer Pal Singh Yadav 1
Salim Ansari 1
Rajpal Singh Saini 1
Narendra Kumar Kashyap 1
Shanta Kumar 1
S.S. Ahluwalia 1
M. Rama Jois 1
Ram Jethmalani 1
Vikram Verma 1
C.P. Thakur 1
Balavant alias Bal Apte 1
Ravi Shankar Prasad 1
Paul Manoj Pandian 1
Balbir Punj 1
Vinay Katiyar 1
Kalraj Mishra 1
Birendra Prasad Baishya 1
N. Balaganga 1
Anusuiya Uikey 1
Parshottam Khodabhai Rupala 1
Prabhat Jha 1
Rajkumar Dhoot 1
Upendra Kushwaha 1
V.P. Singh Badnore 1
Rudra Narayan Pany 1
Kumar Deepak Das 1
Anil Kumar Sahani 1
A. Elavarasan 1
Bharatkumar Raut 1
Naresh Gujral 1
Lalhming Liana 1
Piyush Vedprakash Goyal 1
Anil Madhav Dave 1
Kaptan Singh Solanki 1
Shashi Bhusan Behera 1
Baishnab Parida 1
Y. S. Chowdary 1
A. W. Rabi Bernard 1
Ramchandra Prasad Singh 1
Meghraj Jain 1
Bimla Kashyap Sood 1
Maya Singh 1
Bhagat Singh Koshyari 1
Rajiv Pratap Rudy 1
Ramdas Agarwal 1
Chandan Mitra 1
Prakash Javadekar 1
Avinash Rai Khanna 1
K.B. Shanappa 1
Shreegopal Vyas 1
Aayanur Manjunath 1
Tarun Vijay 1
Kanjibhai Patel 1
Narayan Singh Kesari 1
Gyan Prakash Pilania 1
Jai Prakash Narayan Singh 1
Natuji Halaji Thakor 1
Debabrata Bandyopadhyay 1
Sukhendu Sekhar Roy 1
Smriti Zubin Irani 1
Sushila Tiriya 0
Silvius Condpan 0
Praveen Rashtrapal 0
P. Kannan 0
Bhubaneswar Kalita 0
T. Subbarami Reddy 0
Shantaram Laxman Naik 0
Dasari Narayana Rao 0
G. Sanjeeva Reddy 0
B. S. Gnanadesikan 0
K. Keshava Rao 0
Bhalchandra Mungekar 0
Ram Dayal Munda 0
Avinash Pande 0
K.V.P. Ramachandra Rao 0
Biswajit Daimary 0
Swapan Sadhan Bose 0
N. Janardhana Reddy 0
Brinda Karat 0
Kanimozhi 0
Moinul Hassan 0
Shyamal Chakraborty 0
Y. P. Trivedi 0
Tarini Kanta Roy 0
Tapan Kumar Sen 0
Shyam Benegal 0
Ashok S. Ganguly 0
Javed Akhtar 0
Vijay Mallya 0
T.M. Selvaganapathi 0
B. Jayashree 0
Barun Mukherji 0
Khekiho Zhimomi 0
A.A. Jinnah 0
G. N. Ratanpuri 0
Kanwar Deep Singh 0
Mahmood A. Madani 0
Pyarimohan Mohapatra 0
Prasanta Chatterjee 0
Brijesh Pathak 0
Mohammed Amin 0
Kishore Kumar Mohanty 0
T.K. Rangarajan 0
P. Rajeeve 0
Mahendra Mohan 0
Sanjay Raut 0
Abani Roy 0
Syed Azeez Pasha 0
Rashid Masood 0
P.R. Rajan 0
Saman Pathak 0
Amar Singh 0
Rajeev Chandrasekhar 0
Munquad Ali 0
K.E. Ismail 0
Pramod Kureel 0
Manohar Joshi 0
M. Venkaiah Naidu 0
Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi 0
Sardar Sukh Dev Singh Dhindsa 0
Nand Kumar Sai 0
Balwinder Singh Bhunder 0
Shivpratap Singh 0
Raghunandan Sharma 0
Kusum Rai 0
Surendra Motilal Patel 0
Ranbir Singh Parjapati 0
Gundu Sudha Rani 0
Hema Malini 0
Vijaykumar Rupani 0
Om Prakash Mathur 0
Prabhakar Kore 0
Pravinchandra Rughnathji Naik 0
Bharatsinh Prabhatsinh Parmar 0
Pradip Bhattacharya 0
Srinjoy Bose 0
Derek O'Brien 0
Dilipbhai Shivshankarbhai Pandya 0

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Are you a patriot?

Manish Tewari says Team Anna consists of "armchair fascists, overground Maoists, closet anarchists...lurking behind forces of right reaction and funded by invisible donors whose links may go back a long way abroad". I for one would not bother to argue with someone with a misplaced superciliousness permanently pasted on his face whether or not Team Anna is all or any or none of these. 

I would, however, like this self proclaimed defender of the nation to clarify  whether or not he is a patriot. Its not even a phrase difficult to define, unlike "fascist", "anarchist" "Maoist" etc etc. A patriot, just in case the Congress spokesperson is ignorant of the meaning, and his actions lead me to so believe, is someone who is proud of his country for what it does, and is eager to correct its deficiencies, as distinct from a nationalist who is proud of his country no matter what it does . 

No patriot would be blind to the fact that India is sinking deeper every day into the morass of corruption, and that the ordinary citizen is finding it more and more difficult with every passing day to live a life of dignity. No patriot  would question the imperative need for strong action to be taken to root out corruption, or the ordinary citizen's right to demand such action of the government. No patriot would rail against ordinary citizens who make that demand. To the contrary, he would feel impelled to join forces with them. 

Team Anna is a group of ordinary citizens who, with patriotic zeal, have been vociferously demanding of the government that meaningful action be taken to eradicate the scourge of corruption. One may argue about the merits of the anti-corruption measures they are advocating, but no patriot would attempt to weaken and destabilise the powerful citizens' movement which Team Anna has ignited by hurling misleading labels at them. Such action smacks of utter disregard for the responsibility that every patriot has ------ to correct the deficiencies that his country suffers from.

Hence my question to Manish Tewari ------ are you a patriot?

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Anna Hazare, Amitabh Bachchan ---- the message , the messenger and the medium


Yesterday, Zee TV telecast a program called Little Champs Sa Re Ga Ma Pa , with Anna Hazare as a guest. I am no TV enthusiast but I switched on the TV yesterday as a gesture of support to the meaningful and well-intentioned anti-corruption movement that Anna Hazare is leading. Moved by the simple, down to earth, warm manner in which Anna exhorted the audience to do their bit to rid the country of corruption, I requested FB friends to switch on their TVs as well. It was a delightful program -----Anna spoke with simplicity and humility and a great deal of emotion, the children sang outstandingly well, and it was hard not to get tearful at the beautiful rendition of such songs as " ae mere watan ke logo". 

However, not everyone liked the idea of Anna appearing on television in this kind of a program. Was the appearance akin to,say, Amitabh Bachchan appearing on Little Champs ahead of the release of Aarakshan? 

Amitabh Bachchan is an actor, he uses the public media to enlarge his audience and generate higher profits for the movie's producer who has paid him the crores of rupees that AB gets paid for starring in a movie. Anna Hazare is a social worker, who uses the public media to spread the message that Indians must step forward and save their country from certain ruin. He does not gain personally from the message, unless one counts greater participation of people in an anti corruption movement as personal gain for Anna.

What Anna and Amitabh Bachchan have in common is that they both use the same medium to spread their message. Does the fact that Amitabh Bachchan uses public media for pecuniary gain preclude Anna from using the same medium for public good? I think not. 

There was a time when TV meant only educational programs or agricultural extension programs or news broadcasts.  We have traveled a long way from those days, and today TV is probably the most significant source of entertainment for millions of Indians. We cannot lose sight of the fact, however, that TV can and should also educate. Were Amitabh Bachchan to hesitate to appear on TV to make a plea that more and more people watch his movie so that he can earn more, for fear of being considered mercenary, while the likes of Anna exploited the massive reach of television to awaken Indians from their deep slumber and remind them of their duties as citizens, we'd probably be a better nation than we are today.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

KHUDIRAM BOSE ------ a dedication


Today is the death anniversary of Khudiram Bose ------- this is a dedication to Khudiram Bose, written by my son, Uday Vikram. He’s a student of grade 10, and a passionate admirer of the philosophy espoused by revolutionary freedom fighters such as Bhagat Singh, Udham Singh and Khudiram Bose. 

Have you heard of Khudiram Bose?
He sure has heard of you
Gave up his life with no remorse
To end your servitude
Lively as they say he was
A sharp and hungry mind
Troubled with the thought he was
Of enslavement of our kind
Orphaned at the age of six
But Bose had no regrets
The mother whose love he so relished
Was clearly under threat
Vande Matram, he screamed
A young boy of fifteen
Vande Matram, he screamed
Calling out to a nation asleep
A call that shook the tyrants
A millions laathis fell
But it took a lot more than violence
To have her sons quelled
Vande Matram in the town
The streets it did fill
Young boys scuffled around
Distributing hand bills
Have you heard of Khudiram Bose?
He sure has heard of you
Gave up his life with no remorse
To end your servitude
In Medinipur, 103 years ago
Assembled a crowd of youths
Cast they maddened looks around
But the air was free of hoots
No hues, no shouts
The morning lay in peace
But in came, to drive them out,
Goons of the police
Blood stained the court of guns
Merciless, the laathis came
But up stepped a loyal son
Sushil Kumar was his name
He snatched the weapon from the brute
A boy not older than me
The coward trembled in his boots
While the crowd cheered in glee
He beat the scoundrel black and blue
Before his screams were heard
But our young hero was captured too
And produced before Kingsford
With each stroke of the whip he yelped
But not for help or for himself
Vande Matram, he cried
After each blow was dealt
And to everyone who shed a tear of pride
The fire so fierce had not yet died
For now each drop of teenage blood
Was building up a freedom flood
Have you heard of Khudiram Bose?
He sure has heard of you
Gave up his life with no remorse
To end your servitude
Kingsford feared his death was near
To Muzaffarpur he fled
But to the sons the aim was clear
Sushil must be avenged
Summer’s April 1908
The Jugantar leaders met
Chose they Bose and his mate
To reap the creeper’s death
Prafulla Chaki was chosen too
To repay our beloved mother
Whom they both were loyal to
And thus set out the brothers
The bombs and guns coincidental
To free the mother they both strove
Where only the eyes and heart proved essential
To find the path they roved
Bihar, the home of countless legends
Had given birth to yet another one
With teeming talks of Marx and Lenin
But his mind was ruled by none
Ninth grade, when he first rose
To the service of his mother
And then the anger just explodes
And conquers like no other
A sense of wrong and right
Was all that was required
To bring them all to fight
And leave generations inspired
Have you heard of Khudiram Bose?
He sure has heard of you
Gave up his life with no remorse
To end your servitude
The duo reached the town
With no shoes on their feet
After days of following Kingsford around
They planned an ambush on the street
Around 8.30 as planned,
The judge’s carriage was spotted
They bombed it and ran
They thought they had got it
But Alas! What a disaster!
The carriage contained not the judge
But the wife of a barrister
Who with her daughter was struck
They both ran in different directions
25 miles of running
Before Bose stopped at Veni Station
A sight quite stunning
Clothes unkempt, bare mud -caked feet
And at once police became suspicious
Grabbed him from behind, the cheats
But not against his wishes
Grinned he mysteriously
As the traitors bashed him around
The pistols flew out of his pocket
And Vande Matram out of his mouth
Have you heard of Khudiram Bose?
He sure has heard of you
Gave up his life with no remorse
To end your servitude
Meanwhile, Chaki received some help
A civil servant with regrets
Felt it his duty to treat him well
Gave him shelter, did his best
Mokamghat station
Chaki was discovered
And with no hesitation
He uttered a salute to the mother
And shot himself dead
The English stood in consternation
But they did cut off his head
And sent it home for confirmation
A pity he died among knaves
A great warrior and son
But if we can produce someone even half as brave
The battle is already won
Bose appeared before court
Death was to be his fate
And on the train of martyrdom he climbed aboard
11th August 1908
He smiled as they marched him to his death
What a grievous loss!
But while lived he fought with every breath
And so should you with yours
Have you heard of Khudiram Bose?
He sure has heard of you
Gave up his life with no remorse
To end your servitude.

© Uday Vikram Singh, 2010

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Yedyurappa's return -----the case for strong Lokayuktas


"Outgoing Karnataka Chief Minister B S Yeddyurappa, who lost his job in the wake of his indictment by Lokayukta in the illegal mining scam, publicly said he would return to this post in six months", reports a newspaper today. 
Is Mr Yedyurappa hopeful that the charges of corruption laid against him by the Lokayukta will be dropped in the next six months? Such hope cannot be grounded on a faith in the quickness and promptness of our judicial system ----- one cannot live in this country and not know that it takes years to get a case decided. 
Perhaps Mr Yedyurappa is optimistic that the government will "examine" the Lokayukta's report, and choose to reject its findings and recommendations, not because the Lokayukta has based his findings and recommendations upon inadequate evidence but because it is politically expedient to not prosecute Mr Yedyurappa and his associates. In other words, the evidence that has been painstakingly put together by a quasi judicial authority and establishes a prima facie case of corruption against a powerful politician may well be sacrificed in the interest of keeping the Southern bastion of a political party secure.
Or is it the case that Mr Yedyurappa is secure in the knowledge that the Lokayukta's report will remain "under examination" for as long as it takes for a fresh corruption scandal to erupt, preferably involving the other major political party, whereupon media attention will shift away from Mr Yedyurappa and he can quietly return to the Chief Ministership that he's so very reluctantly let go of?
The citizens of this country deserve better than to have tainted leaders remain in power , whether at the Centre or in the States, simply because the members of the political class are, by and large, engaged in a conspiracy to shield each other from the wages of sin. We deserve better than to have men whose integrity is under cloud to run the government, whether at the Centre or in the States.
          Had the Lokayukta's findings and recommendations not been merely advisory in nature, we would not have been faced with the prospect of Mr Yedyurappa's return to Chief Ministership even without the serious charges against him being examined by a criminal court. The Lokayukta himself would have initiated prosecution proceedings against Mr Yedyurappa in the competent criminal court.
We cannot afford to delay any longer the institutionalisation of a strong, independent Lokpal at the Centre and Lokayuktas in the States, but the government's Lokpal bill makes no mention of Lokayuktas.  When the principle has been accepted that the Lokpal must be empowered to initiate investigations into allegations of corruption against public servants and in fit cases, initiate prosecution proceedings against them without requiring government sanction, why should it not be immediately extended to the Lokayuktas?






Monday, August 1, 2011

Who is here so vile

Who is here so vile
that will (not) love his country?
If any, speak
For him have I offended.

With apologies to Shakespeare, I think these words most aptly describe the sentiments of the men who lead our country today. They don't care for the millions who starve, the millions who are under nourished, the millions who do not even have access to safe drinking water or sanitation facilities, far less access to education and medical care. They don't care about the lakhs of farmers who have taken their own lives, overwhelmed by the high cost - low return  farming that led them into ever deepening debt traps. They don't care about the environmental degradation that is taking place on such a massive scale ----the dead and polluted rivers, the vanishing forests and wildlife, the marauding of precious ores.They don't care about the slow destruction of the tribal cultures and ways of lives of those displaced by mega irrigation, mining and port projects.

They have no love for the country or its people, no thought for its present or future.

The only concern they have is how long they can hold on to their positions of power, and how much wealth they can accumulate, through fair means and foul, during that time. 

Therefore, when their vile acts are threatened to be exposed, they do not get shamed into silence. Nor do they do  beg the people's forgiveness for having sold their conscience for two pieces of silver. 

What do they is to warn those who threaten to expose them that all of them are partners in crime, secure in the belief that the remark will offend none, for there is no one in the country's political arena who is vile enough to love his country !! 

 "We are not afraid of discussing issues of corruption. The opposition also has too many skeletons in its cupboard.", says the country's Prime Minister !

Lokpal -----a blindspot for Indian Express

Does the BJP stand for anything, asks Tavleen Singh in the Indian Express. Before she goes on to list the many good reasons why she thinks that the BJP today is no more than a poor copy of the Congress, she makes a brief but vitriolic diatribe against the Lokayukta and Lokpal. She objects to the "sanctimonious" tone in which the Karnataka Lokayukta "condemned" the Chief Minister through a "media trial". She speaks in a pitying tone about Mr Yedyurappa now being presumed guilty even though the law states that he be presumed innocent till proved guilty. If we "end up with a Lokpal", she says, he will "behave in exactly this way". She then cautions all those who have leapt on to  Anna "Hazare's dodgy bandwagon" that it is dangerous to allow "leftist crusaders to force their will on an elected government".

That a journalist like Tavleen Singh and a newspaper like Indian Express should be so obdurate in opposing the institutionalisation of a strong, independent Lokpal can only lead one to conclude that for the Indian Express, the Lokpal has become a blindspot. After all, it cannot be that the Indian Express and it columnists lack the perspicacity to see that the existing anti corruption mechanisms have failed miserably to deliver and that corruption can be eradicated only if we have a strong and autonomous anti corruption mechanism.  

The Karnataka Lokayukta has, through a team of officers, investigated the allegations of corruption against the Chief Minister and his associates vis a vis iron ore mining in Bellary. Huge amounts of relevant records have been examined. Detailed reports have been painstakingly prepared. There is enough evidence on record to establish a strong case against Mr Yedyurappa and his associates, strong enough for the matter to be placed before a criminal court for prosecution of the accused. However, the law as it now stands in Karnataka does not allow the Lokayukta to initiate prosecution proceedings in the competent court. He is required to place the findings of his investigation as well as his recommendations regarding appropriate action before the government. That is what Justice Hegde has done. That he has also elected to make his findings public is a choice dictated by the total collapse of our institutions. Neither he nor any other citizen, for that matter, expects the government to take action against  powerful men in business or politics, notwithstanding  the compelling evidence that they have indulged in acts of massive corruption. However, public pressure and media attention can make the government act, even against its inclination. It can make the government examine the Lokayukta's report in an objective manner, and initiate criminal proceedings against the accused if it agrees with the findings of the Lokayukta. The courts will then decide whether or not the accused are guilty of acts of corruption. In the meantime, it is in the fitness of things that the accused not hold public office. 

Where does the question of trial by media come in? Media has only demanded that Mr Yedyurappa demit office, there being reasonable ground to doubt his integrity. Neither the media nor indeed the Lokayukta have pronounced the accused guilty. If the statement that there is a strong prima facie case against Mr Yedyurappa and the Reddy brothers is construed as a pronouncement of Mr Yedyurappa's guilt, then the fault lies not with the Lokayukta or with the media but with those who draw the wrong conclusions. 

If in the coming months the government acts in such a manner as to restore its credibility vis a vis the battle against corruption, why would the Lokpal feel compelled to "behave exactly " in the way that the Karnataka Lokayukta has? In any case, if a Lokpal is instituted as envisaged by the Anna Hazare team, the Lokpal itself will initiate criminal proceedings against the accused in fit cases. It will not need to wait for the government to examine its findings and grant its approval, and therefore, not feel the necessity of sharing its findings with the public in the expectation of public pressure ensuring that the report is not placed by government officials at the bottom of a pile of dusty files, never to be looked at again!!

"Dodgy bandwagon" ? If at all the adjective 'dodgy" is to be used in public space, it would most appropriately describe the response of political parties ----every single one of them ----to the challenge of eradicating the scourge of corruption. Anna Hazare, his team and his supporters are neither unreliable nor shifty ---to the contrary, they have remained firm, steadfast and clear headed in their commitment to securing an autonomous and strong anti corruption mechanism. Nor can they be dismissively described as "leftist crusaders" -----they espouse no political philosophy, neither left nor right or centre, but only demand a corruption free India. Does the Indian Express and its columnists find it so difficult to understand that an Indian can be pro India even without being  pro BJP or pro Congress ?