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Anna Hazare detractors have had to eat humble pie

In response to Hazare’s indefinite fast to demand the then NCP minister Sureshdada Jain’s removal from the state cabinet on allegations of corruption, Jain decided to launch his own “indefinite fast” to expose Hazare.

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In August 2003, the then NCP minister Sureshdada Jain decided to teach social worker Anna Hazare a lesson. In response to Hazare’s indefinite fast to demand Jain’s removal from the state cabinet on allegations of corruption, Jain decided to launch his own “indefinite fast” to expose Hazare. He wanted the state to probe into the “corrupt” practices in Hazare’s Hind Swarajya Trust.
But Jain was forced to resign from the cabinet in 2005 after the Justice Sawant Commission indicted him of corruption charges levelled by Hazare.

Nearly two decades ago when Hazare began crusading against corruption, taunts, barbs and sarcastic comments were thrown at him by state’s politicians. His threat to undertake an “indefinite fast unto death” was seen as a damp squib of a threat, not to be taken seriously. Cynics commented that he was a publicity seeker who withdrew his fasts after a compromise. Politicians would dismiss him by saying that he makes allegations without proof, especially when it came to prominent leaders like Sharad Pawar.
In fact, some of his early crusades did backfire.

In the mid-1990s when he undertook his first major fast against corruption, he demanded the resignation of Shiv Sena-BJP ministers Shashikant Sutar, Babanrao Gholap and Mahadev Shivankar. While the allegation against Gholap fell through and Hazare had to spend a day in jail, Sutar and Shivankar were later cleared of the charges by an inquiry commission.

His Bhrashtachar Virodhi Jan Andolan became controversial after some activists were found to blackmail victims while threatening to expose their corruption. However, Hazare persisted with his fight.

In 2003, his anti-corruption crusade against four NCP ministers — Sureshdada Jain, Nawab Malik, Padamsinh Patil and Vijaykumar Gavit — paid off after the four were indicted by the PB Sawant Commission. While Jain and Malik had to quit, Gavit was allowed to continue as he was found guilty of maladministration and not corruption. Patil was not a minister when he was indicted by the commission.

This was Hazare’s biggest victory, as Padamsinh Patil was a powerful NCP leader and closely related to Pawar. Later, Patil was arrested in 2009 for the murder of Congress leader Pawanraje Nimbalkar. He once again clashed with Hazare when the veteran Gandhian accused Patil of plotting to murder him.

Hazare’s latest hunger strike in Delhi is the biggest of all his agitations in terms of its scope and response. It has not only shaken the central government but also resulted in Pawar’s resignation from a ministerial group and has galvanised the citizenry across the country against corruption.

Beginning as a humble driver in the Indian Army, Kisan Baburao Hazare had a near-death experience in the 1965 war with Pakistan. This was the first major turning point in his life when he decided to return to his drought-prone and poverty-stricken village, Ralegan Siddhi in Ahmednagar district, to uplift the village.

He introduced watershed development, rainwater harvesting and dairy development. He successfully persuaded the villagers to shun alcohol and close liquor shops in the village. Such was the transformation that villagers from other talukas and districts began visiting Ralegan Siddhi to replicate his model.

After understanding the gravity of corruption, Hazare became a Right to Information crusader and is credited with pioneering Maharashtra’s Right to Information Act, 2002, well before the national legislation.

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