Forwarded Statement

*April 7, 2011*



*Dear** friends**,*

*Barak Human Rights Protection Committee (BHRPC) is pleased to forward
the  Statement
issued jointly by the Asian Human Rights Commission and (1) Madhya Pradesh
Right to Food Campaign Support Group; (2) Bhopal Gas Peedit Mahila Udyog
Sangthan; (3) Peedit Nirashrit Pension Bhogi Morch; (4) Sarokaar; (5) Baal
Panchayat; (6) Nagrik Adhikar Manch; (7) Yuva Samvad; (8) Prasoon and (9)
Vikas Samvad; human rights organisations working in India regarding the
people’s movement **demanding the Government of India to legislate the Jan
Lokpal Bill without any further delay.*
INDIA: A responsible government will listen to the
people<http://www.humanrights.asia/news/ahrc-news/AHRC-STM-050-2011>

Veteran human rights defender and anti-corruption activist, Mr. Anna Hazare
has started an indefinite fast in New Delhi, on 5 April, demanding the
Government of India to legislate the Jan Lokpal Bill without any further
delay. The Bill is a model law against corruption, drafted and proposed by
the civil society in India to the government. The Bill, if enacted by the
Parliament, would create two independent institutions in the country, the
Lokpal in the centre and the Lokayuktha in the states, mandated to accept
complaints from the general public concerning corruption, and to investigate
and prosecute persons suspected of corruption. The Lokpal and the
Lokayuktha, if constituted, are conceived to be independent bodies like the
Supreme Court and the Election Commission and to remain immune from any form
of external influences. Several civil society groups in India have joined
Hazare in his struggle.

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) along with the above named
organisations expresses solidarity to the struggle and joins hands with the
rest of the civil society in the country in the fight to create an
environment to constitute a corruption free India. We believe that the civil
society initiative in India will lead the way and will form the bedrock of
inspiration for similar movements in South Asia.

Dealing with corruption is a taboo for governments that holds fort in New
Delhi and at the state capitals. For the past 42 years, a draft Bill to
constitute a Lokpal has been pending before the Indian Parliament. No
government was interested in dealing with the subject, or if interested, was
unable to get the law passed. Even though the country's economy advanced to
become the fourth largest in the world in terms of GDP dollar estimates
derived from purchasing power parity, India still does not have an
independent functioning mechanism to deal with corruption. In that, India is
one of the alarmingly corrupt countries of the world, being ranked 87
consistently for the past nine years, by global corruption monitoring
agencies like the Transparency International.

Corruption and the concept of a socialist, secular and democratic republic
cannot go together. Corruption undermines justice, liberty, equality and
fraternity, the core values of India's constitutional framework. Freedom and
sovereignty has no purpose or meaning should corruption remain the central
cord with which the social fabric of a country is woven and if corruption
determines the balance of power in interactions among the people and between
the people and their government. Social evils like caste-based
discrimination can be only addressed adequately in a corruption free
environment. Rightly conceived social welfare measures will deliver timely
results should corruption be brought under control. Effective control of
corruption could be the silver bullet with which poverty can be eliminated.
Corruption undermines fair trial and thus sustainable development and
progress. A corruption free environment is thus the dream of every *aam admi
* and in that perspective Hazare's protest represents the whole of India,
including those who have formed the government and those who opposes it.

While having a legislation that envisages the constitution of independent
and capable institutions is a prerequisite to contain corruption, it will be
devoid of legitimacy, should it lack adequate consultation in the process
and if the law does not receive the support of effective implementing
entities.

A good law must ideally represent the will of the people, for which they
must be heard. The collective wisdom of Indians must be thus held supreme
and the civil society must take the lead to therefore consult the people,
gathering opinion of what they wish to have as a corruption prevention
entity in the country. The Parliament cannot and must not be held the sole
representative body for this purpose, since many members of the Parliament
lacks moral and legal legitimacy as they have benefited from the existing
corrupt environment. It is thus for the civil society of the country to take
the lead, in consultation with the government, to decide upon a transparent
and mature process through which an all inclusive and time bound
consultation could be held to deal with the subject.

The AHRC is of the opinion that having a law unaccompanied by an effective
implementation framework is destined to fail. To begin with, the present
entities in India that deals with corruption must be thoroughly scrutinised.
Of particular importance are: (1) the Central Bureau of Investigation, (2)
the Central Vigilance Commission, (3) prosecutorial agencies and (4) the
local police. In any jurisdiction of the world where corruption has been
successfully prevented, the police have been kept away from the entire
process. Within Asia, like in Singapore, Hong Kong, Japan and South Korea,
where the governments have been successful in keeping corruption relatively
low, the corruption prevention framework has completely excluded the police
from playing any investigative role on allegations of corruption. On the
contrary, it was the police who have been brought under the scanner and
prosecuted in the first phase of controlling corruption in all the four
countries. Even today, these countries keep a watertight separation between
policing and corruption prevention. If the success in these countries could
be emulated in India, which has been the case also in some of the western
countries, the presence of police officers on deputation, irrespective of
their ranks must be prevented in the whole corruption prevention apparatus.
Once the corruption within the police is controlled, it is relatively easy
to deal with the failing rule of law environment, that must be revived to
effectively deal with corruption.

A drive against corruption must also reflect its seriousness within the
prosecutorial service. The hard work and labour of an investigation will be
futile should the prosecutor fail in her job. The existing standard of
prosecution in the country is not capable in discharging its legal mandate.
The practice of appointing special prosecutors in selected cases must be
dropped. Instead, the entire prosecution service must be reviewed and its
standards improved drastically, to fit a justice system that guarantees fair
trial. In the excuse of easing the job of the prosecutor, processes once
suggested by shortsighted government committees like the one that was headed
my former judge, Mr. Malimood, must not be adopted.

The appointment of the members for the proposed Lokpal and Lokayuktha must
be open, transparent and practical. It must not be based on the sheer
pleasure of the government or of seniority in service, as it is the case for
the CVC, nor should it be cumbersome as suggested by the Jan Lokpal Bill. A
simple, transparent process must be devised. In most jurisdictions where
independent and capable corruption prevention agencies exist, such processes
also have been devised. Similarly, both institutions must have its own
independent staff to function, appointed not on deputation from other
government services as it is currently the case concerning the human rights
commissions, but selected on the basis of merits and trained and equipped to
discharge their job.

Indeed such processes would entail heavy expenses, which could not become a
tenable excuse for a country like India, nor can the government deny such
spending since it would smother the very functioning of an essential
institution that the country need for its very survival and if it respects
democracy as one of its founding norms. Indians might be poor India is not.

In addition to the above suggestions, an effective law against corruption
must also guarantee time-bound investigation and trials. One of the curses
of India's justice apparatus is the inordinate delay in investigation and
adjudication, which together can take more than 20 years. In cases
concerning corruption, the experience so far is that the investigation
itself could take more than two decades. The law could also consider
providing a wider interpretation and definition to the term 'corruption'. In
today's context, corruption need not necessarily be limited to financial
corruption. The country's governments are notorious for formulating polices
with corrupt or otherwise malicious intentions. In that, policies that
illegally profits any government or entities therein implemented through
corrupt means or with malafide intentions must also be brought within the
scope of corruption. Contrary to the mistaken perception that such wider
definition of corruption would defeat the law, it has been successfully
implemented in many countries, that has helped to bring in added
responsibility and accountability within governments.

Contrary to what has been repeatedly projected by some of the political
parties in the past few months, corruption in the country and its magnitude
today cannot be held as the fault of any single government. Every political
party in the country has an unshakable responsibility in deteriorating the
conditions in India to the levels as it is today. Those political parties
that pledge support today to the movement led by Hazare, understandably for
sheer political mileage, have their own rotten skeletons inside their
wardrobes. Yet this does not mean that these entities must not be consulted
during the people's consultative process. As a citizen of the country,
everyone, including those who are part of the ruling coalition today, has a
right to be part of the consultation, as individuals. Preventing corruption,
for that matter is not the vested agenda of any particular political party.
It is a decisive cause for the country, in which every political party that
believes in democracy has a responsible role to play.

The AHRC wishes Hazare good health and supports him and his colleagues in
this unique movement, which has the potential, not only to change the
destiny of Indians, but also that of the region for a better tomorrow. It is
also the responsibility of all civil society groups inside and outside India
to join the campaign and extend support to Hazare and his friends.

The AHRC call upon the government of India to ensure that all necessary
steps are initiated to ensure that Hazare's fast finds a meaningful end. By
doing so, the government is not succumbing to the sloganeering of the
political opposition, but is respecting its people and thus fulfilling its
mandate.

http://www.humanrights.asia/news/ahrc-news/AHRC-STM-050-2011




-- 
W A Laskar
Freelance Reporter and Human Rights Defender
with Barak Human Rights Protection Committee <http://bhrpc.wordpress.com/>,
http://bhrpc.wordpress.com
15, Panjabari Road, Darandha, Six Mile,
Guwahati-781037, Assam, India
Cell: +919401942234
Visit my blog <http://www.rightspeaks.blogspot.com> at
www.rightspeaks.blogspot.com
Skype: rights.defender

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