The men and the woman behind Team Anna
IANS | Aug 28, 2011, 12.37PM IST

NEW DELHI: Anna Hazare has become a powerful brand for people-driven change. 
But a brand is not built in isolation. It took, amongst others, the father-son 
due of a former law minister and an activist lawyer, a former police officer 
and an income tax officer-turned RTI activist to power the 24x7 Anna Hazare 
show that fired the nation's imagination like no other. These five people were 
part of his 'inner circle' of advisers: 

1) Arvind Kejriwal: Hazare's right-hand man, an alumnus of Indian Institute of 
Technology (IIT)-Kharagpur, was additional commissioner of Income Tax, Delhi, 
at the young age of 27 before he turned against the establishment. Founder of 
Parivartan, a Delhi-based NGO pushing for transparent governance, the 
43-year-old's tireless crusade educating people about the Right to Information 
Act won him the Ramon Magsaysay Award for Emerging Leadership in 2006. 

2) Shanti Bhushan: One of the two legal brains behind Anna Hazare's Jan Lokpal 
campaign, 86-year-old Shanti Bhushan has been in the news for advocating 
reforms of higher judiciary. He, along with his son Prashant Bhushan, set up 
Campaign for Judicial Accountability and Judicial Reform (CJAR). As law 
minister in the Morarji Desai government, he introduced the Lokpal bill in 
parliament in 1977. He was also co-chairman of the joint committee set in April 
2011 for the Jan Lokpal Bill and played a key role in brokering a compromise 
that led to the parliament agreeing in principle to Hazare's key demands. 

3) Prashant Bhushan: Better known for filing public interest litigation (PIL), 
taking up diverse issues from environmental violations to corruption, the 
bespectacled lawyer was in the small team that co-drafted the Jan Lokpal bill. 
Bhushan, 57, shot into the limelight for a PIL filed by him that led to 
unearthing of the multi-million dollar scandal in the allocation of 2G telecom 
spectrum. He has been a key confidant of Hazare and part of his negotiating 
team with the government. 

4) Kiran Bedi: India's first female police officer, Bedi hit the headlines in 
the early 1980s when she got prime minister Indira Gandhi's car towed away for 
a parking violation. Known as a no-nonsense officer who instilled both fear and 
discipline in her men, she undertook sweeping reforms in New Delhi's Tihar Jail 
and is part of the trio, along with Prashant Bhushan and Kejriwal, who have 
been negotiating with the government over the Lokpal bill. She drew adverse 
attention by her theatrics on the Ramlila stage and was criticised for mocking 
MPs and the way they made fool of those who elected them. 

5) Medha Patkar: The woman who led the Narmada Bachao Andolan, espousing the 
rights of those displaced by the construction of the Narmada and other large 
dams. In 1991, she undertook a three-week fast against the Sardar Sarovar dam 
that brought her almost close to death. That year, she won the Right Livelihood 
Award along with Baba Amte. Patkar was a late entrant to the Anna cause. A 
postgraduate in social work from the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Patkar 
has been an outspoken and hardline member of the movement.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/The-men-and-the-woman-behind-Team-Anna/articleshow/9767845.cms

~Avelino

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