One thing is certain. This is a management issue for India and I'm glad that it came to the forefront. Such corruption and mistreatment of soldiers needs to be dealt with immediately. And if such news lights a fire under the asses of those that allow such negligence to slip under the radar, then its worth the shame we have to face with such news.
I could not agree more. At times like this I am happy that even at the cost of sensationalising the news (perhaps even embellishing it a bit) our TRP happy media has done a service by publicising something that would otherwise be hard to know.
But isn't the bone of contention here that the C.Os themselves are sanctioning this skim from the top?
More than watchdogs or judges I believe the mentality / culture of the army and police has to change. We still follow the colonial mindset in both these (very colonial) institutions and this has resulted in institutionalisation of a culture that:
- is arrogant and believes itself above the law and other citizens (though thankfully less so than in Pakistan)
- tolerates no dissent or discussion on existing structures or processes
- views acknowledging a problem as a sign of weakness
- still wedded to the notion that superiority in rank equals absolute control
- demands had-to-monitor perks like CSD, discounts, reservations, etc. instead of professional pay
- expects unconditional support from citizens merely because they perform a law and order / defense role (i.e. opposition is equated with lack of patriotism)
In India - my home country once - the few occasions that I had to go to a police thana I felt like some second class citizen, entirely at the mercy of these Group C and D grade goons (ASIs, SIs, havildars, constables) who strut about as if the country is their fiefdom and they are doing me a favour -
whereas it's my taxes that pays for their salaries and uniforms. The more senior cops - the SPs, DIGs, IGs etc. set the norms for behaviour by breaking traffic laws in their vehicles, bypassing queues, throwing a hissy fit if asked to follow procedure, and have their day made by watching their flunkies salute them as they jump a traffic light. Sheesh!
I marvel at the way the US has not fallen prey to these traps n their military / police structures (though they have a few other problems). Police here are generally a lot more careful in overstepping boundaries. Neither they nor military think they are above the law - and people are constantly identifying shortcomings and willing to adapt / modify existing processes to make a better org. In the US, I'm clearly an immigrant, have fewer constitutional rights but the one time I went to a Precinct station house, it felt like a full time service industry where my well-being was the highest priority. Amazing.
This is no different than the Pakistani politicians and army men skimming from the top in deals. But when the intention is to just ridicule rather than look pragmatically at a situation, you cant expect much else than the reactions here.
Indeed. The flip side of this can be seen in Pakistan where the blind faith and fanatical love for the military (judged by the posts here on PDF and comments I see on Dawn) results in the army having the very best of everything - at the cost of ordinary citizens who foot the bill - though I am not sure how much of that largess trickles down to the ranks.