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Battle corruption with the audacity of hope

| Friday, April 29, 2011

Sixty-three years have passed since India won her freedom after a struggle of 150 years. How much longer will it take before the country becomes free from corruption?

There's a deep, systemic corruption that affects the common man in his dealings with virtually every department of the government. And there's mind-boggling corruption involving a well-entrenched nexus of politicians, bureaucrats, corporates and builders. That's where favourable policies get framed and manipulated, tenders awarded selectively and land reservations lifted or modified with an ulterior motive. This is the arena of the big politicians, where enormous amounts of kickbacks are generated that help fuel ambitions, fortify electoral war chests, and help them stay in power one way or the other repeatedly.

Trapped in such an environment decade after decade, it's natural for the common man to feel frustrated. It is years of such pent-up frustration that threw up an Anna Hazare, who roused hope that at last something will change. Then followed attempts to pick holes into what he's trying, debate and discuss his "arm-twisting methods" and ask whether he's disrespecting parliamentary rights and procedures.

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Hazare did not break the rules but created new ones. Weeks after Hazare broke his fast, there's been fatigue and doubt over the initial, euphoric victory. Will the hard-won gains in getting civil society to participate in the revised drafting of a Jan Lokpal Bill really fructify? Or will the effort get entangled in red tape?

Pessimism comes naturally, especially in matters as insidious as corruption, and yet, there's reason supported by cold logic to be hopeful. Most certainly, civil society can win this war against corruption. Think of what we have today which our freedom fighters didn't possess when they stood up against the British raj. The people then were extremely poor, the middle class was struggling to eke out a decent living, and there was no live television. There was tremendous unity, will and hope. But there was no computerisation, internet and Facebook and the people were not well-educated.

Modern systems make it easier to track the trail of financial dealings within and outside the country. If one probes into the affairs of a suspect company, it's not difficult to get the records one way or the other; identify the real and dummy shareholders, question the undue favours from the government and basically, connect the dots to unravel the fraud.

The Right to Information Act, 2005, which is a relatively recent legislation, was born out of civil society initiatives and is a potent weapon in the hands of the anti-corruption crusaders.

In this age of terrorism, India and the global community has realised the need for transparency when it comes to hawala transactions and the stashing of black money in Swiss banks. There will be increasing pressure to fix this. These are the many reasons why civil society must be alert, aware and vigilant; optimistic and not pessimistic in this war against corruption.

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By Raji Ayyar
May 14, 2011
I think een small things require in India major puses
I will give an example : to get a phone you need a ration card and KYC to start a bank acct. How does one get this when the Stupid GOVT never responds to the mail that has been sent to them.
Also if comes from a foreign country you cna get these stuff overnite and a person cant carry large sums of money on them also.

I think each person extra money .
People talk about religion and goodness.
I think goodness means to me integrity and that is lacking in India.
It suprises people when one tries to stand against the same.
Yet I see greatess in a lot of people who are poor-integrity, happiness and kindness.
So I think that if one touches the younger generation things will chnage completely.
By naren
May 12, 2011
What is the fear / deterrent for a bureaucrat / politician to become corrupt. We do not have one.
Further how do we recover the lost money from these folks. Is there a way to do it? When we bring systems in place to recover the lost money, will public think twice before adopting corruption? Can we have stringent punishment imposed on the beneficiary
says:

Dear Naren,


You are absolutely right. The corrupt politicians and bureaucrats have no fear of being exposed or punished. The Jan Lokpal movement seeks to address that lacuna.

By Ramesh
May 11, 2011
Only hanging of corrupts can stop rampant corruption in this country.No other punishment will stop corruption.All high profile persons like ministers,MLAs,MPs,bureaucrats,Businessmen etc are hanged for corruption by special courts.
By Dr. Amrit Gaur
May 11, 2011
Appointment of lokpal/s shall be another white elephantine expenditure on the already deficit public exchequer of this nation.
Abolish the discretionary powers, by making a stern, stringent, simple & straight law that right is right, wrong is wrong-( law wise), ought to be the workings & whosoever does otherwise should be dismissed from job forthwith even without inquiry & unnecessarily crowding jails with imprisonments as these acts shall be another burden on the public exchequer. Because discretionary power is the root cause of cancerous corruption in this country.

After the enactment of the above said simple & straight law & a few such dismissals, the nation shall see that how within no time this chronic cancer of corruption is cured lest all other means, measures & remedies shall be merely an eye wash & wastage of time, energy coupled with funds & the result shall be big naught, is cent per cent certain.

The discretionary power shall only be with the president of india, chief justice of india & speakers of both the houses of parliament & none else--dr.amritgaur at:aagassociates1943@yahoo.in
By Vinod Dawda
May 9, 2011
As long as greed is condoned and glorified corruption will breed relentlessly.It is though provoking that the basic culture of the subcontinent has respected humility, tolerance and compassion. These fundamentals have eroded greatly with the rampant race of consumerisms and exhibitionism lauded by the so called modern life. Striking a balance is not easy and hence taming the primitive instinct of greed will breed corruption as long as the the goal in life is to be a greater instinctive consumer and not a better (intelligent) human.Being a mindless consumer is dumb and it is cool to be simple. If this message sinks then there is some hope!!
By Mr. Cletus Zuzarte
May 9, 2011
Abhay, Battling Corruption at the grassroots needs to tackled, that too practically. What does a person do when when he has been asked to pay a bribe or else wait mindlessly with no hope of work getting done through a government office. I am currently stuck in such a quandry. We have good tools like RTI however for every good the corrupt law breaker knows exacly how to circumvent the law. I suggest that at every Govt. office building there should be an anti-corrupton bureau that functions as a watchdog and enables the common man to facilitate the process of good governance. Can you help me get through this maze?
says:

Dear Cletus,


The reality is such that in some situations we have to pay bribe rather than suffer delays and complications. Resist to the utmost. Take revenge in participating aggressively in the anti-corruption movement, by voting against the government and by becoming part of the anti-corruption movement. There's no easy way to rid ourselves of this curse.

By Dr.Gajanan S. Jog,Yoga Teacher.
May 9, 2011
Well Mr.Vaidya, no doubt your write-up is thought provoking. Will it suffice to check corruption? Certainly NOT. Can we start some efforts provoking movement, as the answer lies in culture? A country where the GDP and inflation are in same digits, the budget of every individual shows the deficit, where only the strong impact of culture will protect them from the temptation of corruption. Yoga is having measures to stop all this if grasped properly. Shall we the common minded people work on this to spread the message in the proper manner to achieve the goal of life by everyone, which is not possible by doing corruption of any kind? Let's start an effort-provoking movement based on Indian culture. Definitely, it will take time but results are sure.
By Dr PL Joshi
May 6, 2011
There is nothing new in this write up as tens and thousands of such articles along with case studies have been written on corruption in India. Remember, in last 2-3 years,India has been rocking with scams and frauds which is an indication that a lot of lot money is being generated in India. Unfortunately, this mammoth generation of money remains in few hands and its distribution does not reach the common man.
I suggest to conduct a study of BMC (Bombay Muncipal Corporation) and one will find corruption is at ramphant here. The budget of BMC is much higher than the budgets of several small states in India. BMC stands for
B= Business (it has several projects, contracts etc)
M= Money ( if there is business, there willbe generation of more money)
C= Corruption ( if there is more generation of money, there will be corruption).
By sonu
May 6, 2011
well-entrenched nexus of politicians, bureaucrats, corporates and builders.

It should read " well-entrenched nexus of politicians, bureaucrats, corporates, builders and TV channels; who are wolves in sheep skin, not presenting true facts but twisted versions to hide the truth and benefit the politicians."
By RAJENDRA B. POPAT
May 5, 2011
There is equally massive corruption in almost all the cooperative Housing Societies in Mumbai siphoning off money in major repair and regularly not repairing leakage, not providing minutes, not providing annual accounts, not raising maintenance bills, raising false maintenance bills, removing garden and converting to parking, cutting trees, etc. Registrar does not reply to your letter, BMC officer does not take any action, etc.There is no association or newspaper or news channel which takes up such issues!
By vishwanath kaushik
May 5, 2011
I entirely agree with the views of the author.

A small request to DNA. If the author/writer of such articles has no objection, their e-mail ID can be given at a suitable place in the write-up. This would enable very ordinary persons like me to directly contact the writer/author.
By Reetesh Srivastava
May 4, 2011
The only hope we have is when less and less people become corrupt in the new generation. This does not seem to be happening, in fact today, anybody who can find any means to become corrupt is becoming one because being corrupt pays. In India the court and prosecution system is so bad, that no one has any fear. People who are not corrupt are primarily because of their strong ethical background. Rest all are corrupt or will become corrupt as soon as they get a chance. Can the right minded people do anything about it, for starters go ahead and vote in elections, educate people and make them aware of the overall loss to the society (and hence even to the corrupt individuals) because of corruption?
By Pradeep
May 1, 2011
I am not convinced that, our Reserve Bank is not having the track of money which goes to the Swiss banks or so, or who owns that money. Its all in their hands. We have to goad these people to take lawful action on that. When they create the money, wont they know its hydraulics. Its all taking people as fools. Shouldn't they (RBI) raise voices against illegal flow of money? Or dont't they know what is legal and what is illegal. Mr Subba Rao?
  


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