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India of Gandhi’s dreams?

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India of Gandhi’s dreams?


Aijaz Zaka Syed
In the long years of India’s independence struggle, Mahatma Gandhi would often hold out the utopia of Ram Rajya (governance of Lord Ram) to cheer up a country weighed down by the tyranny of the colonial rule. Of course, the Mahatma did not invoke Ram in the strictest religious sense or subscribed to the saffron-tinted worldview of today’s Hindu right.

What he really meant was an India where honesty, simplicity and piety ruled. In the same vein, writing in Harijan in 1937, the Mahatma turned to the Islamic Caliphate as a model state and society. “I cannot help but to present to you the names of Abu Bakar and Umar (the first and second Caliphs). They were leaders of a vast empire, yet they lived a life of austerity.”

Austerity. Simplicity. And honesty. Gandhi lived by them and envisioned the India of his dreams to be run by the same values. I wonder what Gandhi would make of the current state of affairs in India of his dreams? The great man must be turning in his grave as the country gets rocked by one staggering corruption scam after another. Every new case of graft appears to be progressively bolder and wickeder, setting ever new records of venality and depravity.

What makes the recent scams remarkable is not just the staggering extent of the corruption. While it is not unusual to catch the politicians with their pants down, for the first time they have been caught in the act with the folks who are supposed to watch and monitor them.

For weeks now the Indians – and others around the world – have endlessly listened in morbid fascination to the tapes that have British Indian corporate lobbyist Niira Radia strategising in her varying accent with the bold and beautiful of Indian media to help her clients that include the mightiest of corporate giants, like the Ambani brothers, to the Tatas to the most corrupt politicians in the land. And up for grabs are not just the whopping telecom deals worth Rs1.76 trillion but plump federal cabinet portfolios that would dole out those very deals for a song.

It’s amazing, and incredibly sobering, to see – or hear, rather – fellow journalists play the kingmakers or even God as they promise the mysterious Lady Radia to tell the Congress leadership to pick up a certain A Raja for the telecom minister’s job, the magician from Madras who made the exchequer considerably lighter with his sleight of hand. And all these years you thought selecting his ministers was the prerogative of the prime minister! Another eminent journalist, an editor of India’s first newsmagazine belonging to a powerful media group, is found offering lessons to the nation’s richest man in fixing a court verdict.

Yet our fellow travellers remain charmingly blase. My feisty friend Barkha Dutt of NDTV, who has inspired generations of young Indians to take to journalism with her world-class reporting and news presentation, is enviously indignant when quizzed by senior editors on her acting as a messenger and go-between to lobby for the already discredited Raja.

“It was an error of judgment,” she concedes magnanimously, but insists: “I did nothing wrong and I will not apologise.” As though it was a minor matter of interpretation and semantics.

Maybe I am a bit thick, but isn’t it unethical for journalists to lobby for ministerial berths or other favours, even if they haven’t landed themselves a slice of the pie? Who has given this right to Barkha Dutt, Vir Sanghvi, Prabhu Chawla and many others figuring in the so-called Radia tapes? Certainly not the voters? The media is supposed to be the fourth estate in a democracy. It is supposed to guard over and protect people’s interests. Since when has it become a pimp to politicians? Since when has it started become more than a messenger?

And those who have been given the right to run this country by the people, they appear to be increasingly abdicating and surrendering this responsibility to all sorts of power brokers, lobbyists and corporate players.

What was Dr Manmohan Singh, long lionised and celebrated by the media and growing middle classes as the greatest hope of a new, liberalised India, doing – for God’s sake! – when Raja had been running the biggest financial scam since Independence?

Everyone in and outside the governing Congress sings hosannas of the good doctor and his fabled honesty and sincerity. But is honesty and sincerity enough to run a clean and honest government? The road to hell is paved with good intentions. It’s one of those ironies of fate that over the past seven years India’s cleanest premier has presided over the biggest scams in the nation’s history.

But all said and done, perhaps it’s unfair to single out the politicians and journalists for censure and our collective outrage. In this Turkish hammam (bath), just about everyone is gloriously naked, if we only care to look around. Besides, we get the politicians and journalists we deserve. They represent and are part of the society they live in. We have become a republic of scams, as Brahma Chellaney puts it. Corruption is all pervasive and eating into India’s vitals like a cancer.

Even the once sacred judiciary and armed forces haven’t remained unaffected. In the new, post-Liberalisation, pro-market India of the new millennium, money rules and Mammon is the new deity. The phenomenal economic growth of the past few years, unaffected even by the global recession, has only fuelled this feeding frenzy.

There’s money everywhere, more than India and Indians have ever seen. Yet, we are far from content. Those who are rich are in an endless race to get even richer in the shortest possible time. In the process, they care not who is trampled under their feet.

Meanwhile, the less privileged are trying hard to fast catch up as they drool over the glitz and glamour of the rich and famous beamed into their homes from around the global village. Amitabh Bachchan’s Kaun Banega Crorepati? (Who Wants to be a Millionaire?) generating hopes and launching a billion dreams is an apt metaphor for this new get-rich-quick India. It matters not how you get there. What matters is how fast you can come up with the answer that could unlock that door to El Dorado – pot of gold, smart home, a posh school, snazzy, Japanese cars and a foreign holiday.

In a culture that literally worships money – no businessman begins his day without offering elaborate tributes to Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth – affluence is always associated with respectability. It’s even more so in the 21st-century India where the rich and successful money-makers like the Ambanis and Tatas have emerged as the ultimate role models.

It’s very touching to see Ratan Tata get all worked up over the new culture of crony capitalism in a country that increasingly, according to him, looks and acts like a banana republic. But aren’t people like him now being ripped apart in the Radia tapes (he has approached the Supreme Court to protect his privacy right) part of this crony capitalism culture?

Gandhi and his noble philosophy of simple living and high thinking sound like a nice topic for a drawing room debate. They do not belong in today’s India, though. The Mahatma has become hopelessly anachronistic and obsolete in the land that calls him Father of the Nation.



The writer is based in Dubai.

Email: aijaz.syed@hotmail.com
 
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Belligerence tells a story


December 14, 2010

A Surya Prakash

Why is the Congress so adamant about refusing to set up a JPC to probe the 2G Spectrum scam? Whom is the party trying to shield?

The Congress has been blocking a Joint Parliamentary Committee probe into the 2G Spectrum scam and behaving as if such an inquiry could prove fatal to the party’s image and political prospects. Going by past record, it must be said at the very outset that the party has never held out this long and staked its reputation merely to protect a Minister, that too one from an alliance party. Is there a message in the party’s obduracy?

A glimpse at what transpired in three earlier JPCs may help us answer this Rs 1.76 lakh crore question. The first of the three JPCs in question was the one which probed the Bofors deal. This committee was set up, after much resistance, following revelations made by Swedish Radio on April 16, 1987 that Indian politicians and officials had been bribed by the Swedish arms-maker Bofors to win the contract to supply field guns to the Indian Army.

The deal was signed by the Rajiv Gandhi Government just a year before news of the scandal broke. Though the Congress had 410 MPs in the Lok Sabha, it was rattled by the ‘breaking news’ from Sweden and launched a massive cover-up to shield Rajiv Gandhi and his family from the allegation that they had received commissions from Bofors via front companies and friends with Swiss bank accounts. As more and more information about the payoffs poured in, the Opposition stepped up the pressure for a JPC.

The Congress conceded the demand three months hence when it realised that the people had begun to believe that the Prime Minister had something to hide. However, even as it did so, it ensured that the terms of reference put the committee in a straitjacket. It did not want the committee to travel abroad or record the testimonies of witnesses in Sweden and Switzerland.

Given these constraints, the Opposition felt that the JPC was a toothless wonder and decided to stay away. The Congress, however, went ahead with this lame duck inquiry, packed the committee with loyalists of the Nehru-Gandhi family and chose the most trusted loyalist — Mr B Shankaranand — as its chairman.

Since it had over 400 members in the Lok Sabha, this JPC was an overwhelmingly ‘Congress Parliamentary Committee’. Further, in order to give the committee an ‘all-party’ veneer, some MPs of the smaller ‘friendly’ parties, which reluctantly occupy Opposition benches, were drafted as members.

As can be seen from the final outcome, Mr Shankaranand lived up to the great expectations that his leader had in him and produced a report which was dubbed a ‘whitewash’ by all citizens who could sift fiction from fact. The committee claimed in its April 1988 report that no middleman was involved in the field gun deal and there was no evidence of commissions or bribes having been paid.

The committee did not summon a single Minister or pose a single question that would have embarrassed the Government. Within weeks, the media produced damning evidence of payments made by Bofors to several entities, including Ottavio Quattrocchi, a friend of Rajiv and Sonia Gandhi, in whose account Bofors had deposited $7.3 million.

A year later, the Comptroller and Auditor-General questioned many conclusions of this JPC, including the ones pertaining to agents and commissions. He wondered why the Government had not acted on the advice of the Indian Ambassador in Sweden that Bofors’s books of account be examined by Indian auditors and why the Bofors contract did not specifically contain the “No Agents” clause. As all this evidence tumbled out, it became obvious that the Shankaranand Committee Report was not worth the paper it was printed in. No other parliamentary committee has wrought such damage to the institution of Parliament as this one.

But then, the credibility and dignity of Parliament has always been sacrificed by the Congress to protect its first family. The party even reduced Parliament to a rubber stamp to enable Mrs Indira Gandhi to survive in office after she was unseated by the Allahabad High Court for corrupt electoral practice.

However, the party displays sweet reasonableness and becomes responsive to public opinion when the Nehru-Gandhis are not involved, for example, the sacking of Mr Ashok Chavan over the Adarsh Cooperative Housing scandal.

That is why the JPC that probed irregularities in securities and banking transactions between August 1992 and December 1993 when PV Narasimha Rao was Prime Minister produced a comprehensive report with minimal interference by the Congress. Similarly, the JPC on the Stock Market Scam (constituted in April 2001; report submitted in December 2002) when Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee was Prime Minister did an exhaustive analysis of the problem and compelled the Government to step up vigilance and regulation in the financial sector.

Mr Manmohan Singh was examined by both these JPCs (as Finance Minister in 1993 and former Finance Minister in 2002). Apart from Mr Singh, the 1992-93 JPC examined Mr Shankaranand, Health Minister, who earlier held the petroleum portfolio, and Madhu Dandavate, former Finance Minister. The 2001-2002 JPC examined two Ministers — Finance Minister Jaswant Singh and External Affairs Minister Yashwant Sinha — and two former Ministers, Mr Manmohan Singh and Mr P Chidambaram.

But, despite all this experience, why is the Prime Minister blocking a JPC probe into the 2G Scam and why is he afraid of possible summons from the committee? Why should a man with such abundant familiarity with JPCs flinch at the prospect of another tete-a-tete with a JPC now? Whom is he protecting? Those who say nothing comes of JPC investigations have obviously not read the reports of these two committees. It is rather strange to hear spokespersons of the Congress saying this, unless of course they have the Bofors JPC in mind.

According to the CAG, the 2G scam could have cost us Rs 1.76 lakh crore. This is possibly the biggest loss that a Minister has caused to the exchequer via a single policy in the democratic world. If this is not worthy of a JPC probe, pray, what is? Yet, the Congress has held out throughout the Winter session of Parliament and, displaying utter contempt for public opinion and parliamentary processes.

There are enough clues in history as to when the party displays such crass obstinacy. So, if you think the 2G Spectrum scam is all about Mr A Raja and the DMK, think again. You could be barking up the wrong tree.
 
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If today we are bursting out the scams that means we are in the right direction. at least we have the scope of bursting out these nutcases. real probem would have been if these scams would have continued and no one would have known.....

anyways there is spree of anti india articles.
 
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Conclusion :-


It is request from my side to all indian members here, please please and please...

Bring back "National Democratic Alliance" back in power in next lok sabha elections.....VOTE FOR THEM..

Congress = CORRUPTION (thats it)
 
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How is this related to Indian Defence? I can see that mods have deleted 3 threads for this reason just now. Then why is this thread still on?

"All people are equal but some people are more equal than others!"
 
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India of Gandhi’s dreams?


Gandhi and his noble philosophy of simple living and high thinking sound like a nice topic for a drawing room debate. They do not belong in today’s India, though. The Mahatma has become hopelessly anachronistic and obsolete in the land that calls him Father of the Nation.

Not only India , these values are out of place the world over.None of us have the same values our parents displayed.

Things relevant half a century ago need not be applicable as strongly now as they were then.
 
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why should there be an india of gandhi dreams ? what was right 60 yrs ago is definatly not today , we need to keep chainging and moving with the times . also show me one neta which is clean? they all are a bunch of corrupt guys , some more than others , but at least they have not brought the country in a ression which the world faces . so give them credit for that . make do with what we have...
 
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Question to indians only

so if next time rahul gandhi runs for the pm post,wat will be ur decision on the voting?
 
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He has to prove himself as a minister before he can be a PM. No more dynasty politics please. I have nothing against him, but I feel that we need to give NDA a chance this time. Enough of congress and its record breaking scams.
When will our leaders think like us?
 
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If today we are bursting out the scams that means we are in the right direction. at least we have the scope of bursting out these nutcases. real probem would have been if these scams would have continued and no one would have known.....

anyways there is spree of anti india articles.

"Today" we are bursting out the scams only because of the initiatives of the courts and the media. But what can they do? Expose scams and that is it. Ever seen a single politician being convicted for corruption or illegality in the history of this country?

We may have busted the real problem, but if we soon do not get to the real solution (that is convicting the people in power), I am afraid, there will be very little left for the future generations to be proud of this nation.

And also the articles posted, in my view, are for the purpose of introspection and not for bashing India.
 
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No to UPA, No to NDA!!!

Can BJP come without NDA? Empathic no!!!

Can Congress come to power? May be!!!

I will go for May be!!!
 
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Conclusion :-


It is request from my side to all indian members here, please please and please...

Bring back "National Democratic Alliance" back in power in next lok sabha elections.....VOTE FOR THEM..

Congress = CORRUPTION (thats it)

BJP = Shameless Jokers!!!
 
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india of gandhi ji's dreams?

that india my friend would have never industrialised. had it come to frutition we would all be wearing khadi with a spinning wheel at each house.

gandhi ji was set against industrialization and advocated cottage industries exclusively. india would never have been competitive with the rest of the world with that.
 
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