http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?271400

<http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?271400>MAGAZINE | APR 25,
2011<http://www.outlookindia.com/content.aspx?issue=10743>

<http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?271400>
Make Sure The Cure Isn’t Worse Than The
Disease<http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?271400>
Itself the outcome of a bottom-up movement, the Jan Lokpal bill ironically
proposes a centralised framework against graft. Without checks and balances.
ARUNA ROY<http://www.outlookindia.com/peoplefnl.aspx?pid=4626&author=Aruna+Roy>
 ,  NIKHIL 
DEY<http://www.outlookindia.com/peoplefnl.aspx?pid=11590&author=Nikhil+Dey>

There was never any doubt that India needs a strong Lokpal Act. The protest
has paved the way for its enactment. With the exultation over the
anti-corruption campaign’s ‘victory’ quieting down, it’s time to take stock.
Nuanced arguments—and indeed substance—have to recover lost ground to take
the discourse further. Now for a quick look at the happenings at Jantar
Mantar. It was a peaceful protest, with both sides behaving well. The police
did not enforce Section 144 at India Gate or push the crowds back at Jantar
Mantar. Across the country, too, the protest was non-violent. But to call it
Gandhian is perhaps difficult when the leader of the campaign advocates
death penalty for the corrupt.

It was a five-day wonder, sandwiched by the media between the cricket World
Cup and the IPL matches. It brought thousands out from different parts of
urban India to support a campaign against corruption. It was encouraging to
see people who talk incessantly against corruption in their homes come out
on the streets. The irony lay in the fact that many in the middle class who
expressed angst are an integral part of processes where speed money, tax
evasion and benami transactions contribute to the black-money economy
berated so much at Jantar Mantar. With neo-liberal mores of wealth becoming
the ultimate evaluation of success, the line between capitalism and
corruption has blurred. Nevertheless, the agitation benefited by keeping
away from the specifics that produce adversaries and convert slogans into
struggles. Fighting corruption can be dangerous and fatal, as many RTI users
have discovered. It takes more—much more—than smses to fight the brazenness
of corrupt practice. We first need to acknowledge this to bring about real
change.

The poor face much more than monetary corruption in every aspect of their
lives. The arbitrary use of power for undemocratic, anti-people policies,
legislations and providing support to corporate houses is the mindset that
rules India today. The root lies in an unjust and arbitrary system of
governance. The government should take on the role of a conscience-keeper
and act as a shield for the poor and the marginalised. In this primary duty,
it has failed. But the onus for promoting the decay of the system is more
universally shared. It’s not just the much-lampooned corrupt ‘neta’ we all
use and abuse as a symbol who is to blame. We should also take into account
the bureaucrat, the slick corporate executive (the boxwallah in old
terminology), the religious leader protecting his millions or billions from
investigation, the jholawala, the doctor and the lawyer (both traders in
people’s predicaments), the tapper and his tapes, the media with its paid
news and the corporate house, ready with payoffs. How much of this will
change after the Jantar Mantar hunger strike?

Will this Jan Lokpal bill end corruption? Even if one discounts the
unrealistic expectations of a 90 per cent reduction in corruption, the
proposed bill has raised expectations to epic proportions, but without
creating an understanding of what it will take to make it work even
partially. The expectation in the middle class is that the days of
corruption will be over, and India will burst forth into the free atmosphere
of a “second independence”.

A Lokpal bill cannot be the panacea for all corruption, and how many second
wars of independence will we fight? Platitudes are dangerous, as they raise
hopes only to later dash them. A vigilant society has serious
responsibilities over a period of time. The attempt to make the government
cave in succeeded. The gazette notification was issued: no mean achievement.
But the people remain uninformed about the content and the details of the
bill and expect miracles, a naive faith that the corrupt will disappear and
corruption fade away.



Hazare’s praise of Modi reflected the alignment of corporate power with
majoritarianism. And an intolerance for dissent.


The primary focus of the campaign was the demand for acceptance of the joint
drafting committee. Although the campaign provided an enormous opportunity
to explain, and even put up for debate, various provisions of the Jan Lokpal
bill, the committee and the interpersonal statements of some of the campaign
members have become the focus of all attention. With so much coverage, the
opportunity to place the details of the bill in the public domain was lost.
There could have been simultaneous discussions on the bill to educate and
involve people. This would only have made the arguments stronger, the
coverage wider.

But mystery and misinformation is left to prevail. Important questions are
being asked about what makes the establishment respond. Irom Sharmila has
been fasting for 10 years against the draconian and completely undemocratic
Armed Forces Special Powers Act, crippling and emasculating conflict zones
like the Northeast and Kashmir. In her case, fasting unto death has become a
weapon which has no effect on a callous and cynical establishment. The fight
against corruption has to recognise its symbiotic link with the fight for
justice to build a more humane country.

Democracy is much too complex to become a personality debate, a media
campaign or an event, however remarkable. The public face of the campaign
seemed to leave out the concerns of ‘Bharat’ almost completely. A Dalit
leader, talking on corruption in Jaipur a few days ago, commented that the
middle class, which assists the giving and taking of bribes, is doing its
“prayaschit” at Jantar Mantar with havans and bhajans. The disquiet about
markedly Hindutva symbols and associates of the campaign has turned into
deep suspicion following Anna Hazare’s praise for the Narendra Modi
development model. It seems to symbolise an alignment of corporate power
with a kind of majoritarianism and religiosity and a natural disdain for
dissent.

A demand for democratic representation (even of ‘civil society’) comes with
the responsibility of commitment to democratic practice. There has not been
enough public debate and discussion on this law, and undue haste will
preclude the proper representation of opinions. Similarly, democratic
scrutiny by existing institutions needs to be strengthened. Brushing it
aside will only weaken the argument on citizens’ participation, on which
this campaign rests. There has not been enough public debate and discussion
on this law, either geographically, thematically or in terms of examination
of the needs of special interest groups.

Despite many demands, the government has been unwilling to institutionalise
a pre-legislative process. Transparency and mandatory public consultation
from policy to legislation would give people an opportunity to have their
concerns adequately addressed before legislations are framed by the
government, and would allow for more informed parliamentary debate when they
are passed. Even the NAC should be institutionalised as an advisory body
that explores the space for pre-legislative discussion and public
consultation. The joint committee has an equal obligation to create space
for pre-legislative debate and discussion. The Jan Lokpal bill can only be a
people’s law if it goes through wide consultative processes where people
contribute to its drafting, and Parliament passes it into law after an
informed debate. So far, unfortunately, very few people know much more than
the name of the proposed legislation.

The Jan Lokpal seeks to create a parallel dispensation at the state and
central levels, so it is in fact a joint Jan Lokpal/Lokayukta bill under
consideration. The Lokpal is a collective of people to independently receive
and investigate citizens’ complaints on corruption at any level and, where
necessary, initiate prosecution.

At the core, it seeks to activate the existing, half-baked vigilance
machinery by putting it under the control and supervision of the 11-member
Jan Lokpal, or Lokayukta, with an independent cadre of vigilance officers.
The chief vigilance officer of a department will oversee a vigilance
machinery in every office. The bill brings the CVC and that part of the CBI
that deals with corruption under the Lokpal. It proposes that henceforth all
vigilance officers under the Lokpal and the CVO will be full-time and drawn
from other departments. Investigations need extra staff. A huge additional
bureaucracy will have to be created. Nevertheless, it is incomprehensible as
to how the Lokpal (or Ayukta) will investigate the lakhs of complaints
received, especially at the remote district and sub-district levels.

The Jan Lokpals at different levels will be deemed police officers and their
offices will be deemed police stations with all functions, including
ordering penalties on departments and officers they find guilty. They have
the power to suspend an executive decision where there might be a suspicion
of corruption. So, while trials will take place in judicial courts, in other
senses they would play the role of investigator, prosecutor and judge rolled
into one. They will be the oversight body for all three wings of government,
including the judiciary, making them the most powerful arm of the state.
There is, however, only a weak accountability framework, ill-equipped to
restrain this proposed system’s almost unbridled power.

The drafters of the bill are confident that the Lokpal’s integrity and
accountability is assured through a) a transparent process of functioning,
b) judicial review and c) mandating that the main responsibility of the
11-member body is to ensure the integrity of the whole vigilance
establishment under them. The integrity and accountability of the 11-member
body is in turn apparently assured by their very transparent selection
process and the fact that complaints against them can be made to the Supreme
Court.

The basic concern remains: however robust the appointment process, we cannot
justify concentrated power based on “good faith” and “goodness”, and
dispense with the need for equally strong mechanisms for accountability. No
guarantees can be proffered that a non-partisan selection process will be
successful. Equally worrying is ensuring efficiency in the selection and
performance of vigilance officers. The powers of vigilance officers will be
even more, and their remoteness from the Lokpal will give them a kind of
immunity that could make it the most ‘lucrative’ post in government. We need
to make sure that the cure is not worse than the disease, and not end up
with a Frankensteinian structure.

Their appellate jurisdiction in corruption matters is still unclear. While
complaints of corruption against the Lokpal will lie with the Supreme Court,
there’s no clarity about ensuring efficiency and accountability in carrying
out other functions. In this highly centralised accountability structure
that points upwards, who will watch the watchman?

There is a strong element of circularity between the Supreme Court and the
Jan Lokpal, and potential for mutual support or tension, as they will hear
complaints against each other. In addition, two judges each from the Supreme
Court and high courts will be in the selection committee for the appointment
of Jan Lokpals. The vexatious ‘sanction’ needed for investigation and
prosecution will no longer be sought from reluctant supervisory authorities.
The Jan Lokpal benches will be empowered to provide sanction for all
investigations. Some of these changes will probably require a constitutional
amendment. Another major concern is the potential backlog in investigation
and prosecution. Criminal investigation of corruption takes time. Combined
with the legal requirement of due process, it will threaten to rapidly
engulf the institution in delays and backlogs.

In addition, the Jan Lokpal has the responsibility of providing special
protection to whistle-blowers, including RTI users facing threat of
violence. An onerous responsibility.



Despite the ‘Jan’, what the proposed bill pushes is centralisation. Citizens
can only file complaints and wait. Like they now do.


The determination to bring grievance redressal under the ambit of the Jan
Lokpal will ensure that it collapses under its own weight. A citizens’
charter mandated department-wise (also monitored by the Jan Lokpal), with
powers to order inclusions in the charter, pushes it into the domain of the
executive. Non-compliance of the citizens’ charter can also become a
vigilance complaint if the grievance redressal system mandated by the act
fails. Establishing a functioning grievance redressal system is a huge
challenge: it has to be built bottom upwards. The Jan Lokpal has arrogated
to itself a role that is unpragmatic, and in the process it has promoted
spiralling expectations without a resolution of the contradictions that
exist.

Even the name is misleading. An overemphasis on the ‘Jan’ in the Lokpal
notwithstanding, this citizens’ commissionerate is actually an exercise in
centralising power. The empowerment of the citizen is confined to the right
to file a complaint and be heard. After that, everything rests on hope for
justice from the Jan Lokpal. In trying to do too much, the bill might fail
comprehensively. The Lokpal should restrict itself to complaints of
corruption, be competent and proactive in dealing with grand corruption, and
leave some of the other tasks to other legislations.

Controlling corruption—that seemed to be the overwhelming demand of the
people who expressed support for the recent agitation. They need to
comprehend that it is a long haul to change the pervasive culture of
corruption. Civil society needs to question its willingness to pay for
“out-of-turn” benefits, look at the corruption of corporate-controlled
establishments and understand that sustained change demands sustained
efforts by citizens.

The RTI Act and its implementation have rested on persistent struggle. Its
greatest contribution is the empowerment of the common person to hold every
wing of the state accountable. It is a highly decentralised battle, bringing
accessed information into the public domain to force change. That is why it
is a people’s law. The Jan Lokpal could be a natural corollary to the RTI as
people ask, “What next?”. But the bill, in being too centralised, runs the
danger of diluting the nascent change in power relationships of the very
poor. In fact, it fails to build on people’s institutions like social audits
and public audits, running counter to the ‘Lok’—an expectation of
recognition of people’s power.

Finally, processes of making the law must maintain high standards of
democratic practice. People supported an idea in good faith. The faith needs
to be vindicated. The law must be understood and debated clause by clause.
‘India Against Corruption’ says its agenda is decentralised decision-making
and participatory democracy. Now, as the better half of government on a
drafting committee, it carries the responsibility to demonstrate the
participatory drafting of a people’s law. It began as a dissenting voice and
has therefore an obligation to make space for dissenting views—above all, to
hear and incorporate the plurality of voices.
------------------------------

*The authors are with the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan (MKSS) Collective.*

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