[The Indian Express is virtually running a concerted campaign against the
anti-corruption movement under way at the moment.
But this one is arguably a very perceptive and balanced analysis.
Needs be read together with Mukul Sharma's 'The Making of Anna Hazare',
another unsympathetic but detailed and nuanced treatment, at <
http://kafila.org/2011/04/12/the-making-of-anna-hazare/>.

Quote
*

If democracy on the one hand is about popular sovereignty, freedom and
equality, it is also about procedures and principles. One of these
principles is the separation of powers. It is of the utmost importance that
power should not be concentrated in one institution, and that democratic
decisions should be subject to review not only by citizens, but also by
other state institutions to ensure conformity with the Constitution.
Democracy is the only form of government that is capable of self-

correction; this should not be compromised for any reason whatsoever.
*

**

*...*

*

But this does not mean that we uncritically accept civil society initiatives
as wholly good and entirely democratic. Civil society is a plural space, and
some organisations can carry within them the seeds of authoritarianism, and
of an inexorable “will to power”. These initiatives should also be subjected
to public scrutiny and engaged with. Eternal vigilance is, after all, the
price we willingly pay for democracy.

*Unquote]

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/the-seeds-of-authoritarianism/774794/0

The seeds of authoritarianism

*Neera Chandhoke <http://www.indianexpress.com/columnist/neerachandhoke/>**Tue
Apr 12 2011, 02:41 hrs
Any perceptive analyst of democracy will testify that there is no necessary
relationship between democracy and a corruption-proof regime, or
development, or political stability. If we were to evaluate democracy from
the vantage point of the desired ends we expect it to realise, it would fare
rather poorly when compared to authoritarian governments, say the one
institutionalised in Singapore by its former prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew.
Yew transformed Singapore from a malaria-infested swamp to an economic
powerhouse, and a major centre of finance. The island-state has one of the
highest per capita incomes in the world, possesses a world-class educational
and health system, and boasts of an incorruptible public service.

But the regime ruthlessly controls the press, does not permit freedom of
expression, and stamps out dissidence — and, often, dissidents. It might
have controlled corruption, achieved material well-being, and become one of
the financial power centres of the world; but Singapore does not respect the
two prime fundamentals of democracy as India does: popular sovereignty and
the equal moral status of citizens.

This is not to celebrate India’s democracy, which is deeply flawed in many
crucial respects. It is to point out that the proposed solutions for a
corruption-free India that are currently on offer might not be democratic at
all. I am by no means downplaying the achievements of the struggle against
corruption. Anna Hazare is significant because his fast unto death catalysed
the exasperation and the anger of Indian citizens against a system which has
trapped all of us in its ugly and greedy clutches. The sight of hundreds of
people holding candles in their hand was moving because it transmitted two
powerful messages.

One, the political elite is but the representative of the people, and the
people are entitled to demand accountability of these representatives for
all acts of omission and commission. Two, all those hundreds of crores that
pass from hand to hand; from ministers, to industrial houses, to lobbyists,
to shady firms, and to individuals, are public money. People have a right to
demand that the taxes that are extracted from them are spent for the public
good and not for private gain.

So, when members of the political elite castigate the campaign against
corruption as blackmail, it occasions a blink. Hello guys, this is what
civil society is about. In 1790, the eminent Irish orator, wit, legal
luminary, and member of the British parliament, John Curran (1750-1817) had
suggested that “the condition on which god hath given liberty to man is
eternal vigilance.” This is the historical mandate of civil society. In
democratic states, civil society is expected to keep watch on violations of
democratic norms by the state, through citizen activism, the making and
circulation of informed public opinion, a free media, a multiplicity of
social associations and sundry means of protest.

Yet a word of caution might be in order here. Confronted with the
intractable problems that the messy but occasionally creative world of
democracy brings with it, some civil society organisations prefer to
substitute democracy with administration. Establish a Jan Lokpal, endow it
with colossal power, bestow on it the status of a Leviathan, and all our
problems will be solved. Sorry, this is not democratic.

If democracy on the one hand is about popular sovereignty, freedom and
equality, it is also about procedures and principles. One of these
principles is the separation of powers. It is of the utmost importance that
power should not be concentrated in one institution, and that democratic
decisions should be subject to review not only by citizens, but also by
other state institutions to ensure conformity with the Constitution.
Democracy is the only form of government that is capable of self-correction;
this should not be compromised for any reason whatsoever.

Certainly corruption is a major issue and needs to be fought, but according
to procedures and norms, and in keeping with the mandate of the
Constitution. The country is not Ralegan Siddhi, where alcoholics are
flogged to make them give up their ways. India is democratic, and in a
democracy even guilty people have rights. Anna Hazare may have earned the
status of a big brother, but no democrat can allow him to turn this Lokpal
into another big brother right out of the pages of George Orwell’s projected
nightmare.

More worrying are the political beliefs held by this gentleman. He wants
corrupt people to be put to death! In a civilised society, surely, the very
idea of capital punishment is anathema. What gives cause for even more
anxiety is the extraordinarily low opinion that this Gandhian has of the
very people who had rallied around him during his fast. “Ordinary voter
[sic] does not have awareness”, he is reported to have said in a meeting
with the press. “They cast their vote under the influence of Rs 100 or a
bottle of liquor or a sari offered by candidates. They do not understand the
value of their vote.”

This is an astonishing statement. Does not contempt for the ordinary Indian
citizen defy the very rationale of democracy, and that of its major claim to
legitimacy, that of equal moral status? Moreover, Anna Hazare should pay
more attention to the history of elections. Does he really not remember how
arbitrary and non-performing governments have been voted out of power in
national and state elections?

More significantly this “voting out” has been carried out by the very
ordinary Indian who he betrays such disdain for. Despite all its flaws,
political democracy in the country has enabled large numbers of poor and
marginal people to understand the power of the franchise, enter the public
arena of politics, and to some degree influence the political discourse, and
the fate of governments.

To wrap up the argument, it is time the holders of state power understand
that mobilisation in civil society against or for policies, is an integral
part of democratic politics, particularly when our representatives have
betrayed us time and again. The state enacts, implements and adjudicates
policies in our name, and governs in our name. We, therefore, have the right
to ask why we should accept unjust and arbitrary policies, and above all,
corruption.

But this does not mean that we uncritically accept civil society initiatives
as wholly good and entirely democratic. Civil society is a plural space, and
some organisations can carry within them the seeds of authoritarianism, and
of an inexorable “will to power”. These initiatives should also be subjected
to public scrutiny and engaged with. Eternal vigilance is, after all, the
price we willingly pay for democracy.

The writer is professor of political science at the University of Delhi

**
*



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Peace Is Doable

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