*FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
*AHRC-STM-054-2011
April 21, 2011

*A Statement by the Asian Human Rights Commission *

*INDIA: Stifle not the movement breathe life into it *

The popular movement against corruption in India, led by Mr. Anna Hazare and
others, shares broadly, opinions of the average citizen concerning
corruption. That, the reign of corruption in the country must be brought
under control, if it cannot be immediately eliminated and that there are no
adequate domestic legal and executing frameworks at the moment that could
counter corruption -- sensibly and effectively. The movement also shares
another common concern with the *Aam Aadmi* (common man) that an alarmingly
high number of the politicians in the country, elected, nominated or leading
parties as its office bearers and/or as think-tanks are not interested in
ending corruption. Many of them and the political parties they lead, have
benefited from corruption, at least to the extent of seeking, attaining, and
if possible, maintaining political power. Where the politicians failed, some
leaders of the country's civil society with the support of the media and the
people succeeded -- to bring the unpleasant reality of corruption to a point
of discussion and hopefully push the discussion into sensible actions.

Yet, the movement and the people behind it, including Hazare, are facing
criticism on several grounds, many that are acceptable, and a few unfair.
There is indeed good rationale in the allegation that the *Jan Lokpal
Bill*is not the product of a wider consultation. In that,
*Jan* in the name of the proposed law is a misnomer. A law against
corruption is an important legislation. When important decisions are made,
it is wise to hold as many discussions as possible, involving as many number
of persons as possible, a thumb rule of modern democracy, practiced in Asia
a millennium before the term was coined in modern vocabulary. Such
consultations are still possible. There is no logic in the assumption that
the *Aam Aadmi* does not know much. Such a perception can be interpreted as
offensive against the collective wisdom of the people. The civil society in
India must know by now that one of the serious issues that plague the
legislative processes in the country is the absence of adequate
consultations with persons having the liberty to make informed decisions.

Criticism has also been made against the media coverage the movement
received, right from the second day of Hazare's fast in New Delhi and the
print and electronic media space the movement continues to receive today. An
examination of the Indian media and the trends they follow since the past
decade show that a large section of the country's journalists are today
interested only in event reporting, that would sell a few extra copies or
attract some companies to sponsor the airtime. Professionalism, including
analysing an incident, maintaining impartiality and continuity in reportage
are scarce to find in India. A large section of the so-called 'mainstream
media' have reduced themselves to become a mere mouthpiece for political
parties. In that the Indian media largely have become an event reporting
enterprise. Though Hazare's fast was reported widely, it was however hard to
find any analysis about the issue that Hazare is leading a fight against in
the reportage. It took time for the media to provide to the common person
detailed view about what this is all about. Even in that there are not more
than three newspapers that did their job reasonably well. This not only
showcases the apathy to serious issues of many scribes in the country, but
also reiterates that a large number of them are professionally incapable in
providing an appropriate and thorough analysis on an issue as serious as
corruption. Discussing about what must be done to prevent a crime is much
more intellectually challenging than mere reporting about it.

Yet another allegation, which has now started taking the usual rounds
through emails, is to portray the entire movement as a road show for the
government. Some even went to the extent of commending that corruption must
not be the priority of the government at the moment and the anti-corruption
movement is an attempt to sabotage other movements, for instance, the one
against caste-based discrimination. Unfortunately, while the development in
communication technologies help information assimilation, it could also be
used to tell the world about one's lack of understanding about issues, in
this case, about both corruption and caste-based discrimination. While it is
true that caste-based discrimination is a serious concern, without having a
functioning justice apparatus deep-rooted issues like caste cannot be dealt
with.

A justice framework that is intended to facilitate social change and thus
play a role in social engineering must have the minimum guarantee that it
could function normally. A fundamental understanding of crime, punishment
and social change is that it is not the prescribed intensity of a punishment
that prevents crime, but the certainty of punishment, however small it may
be. If caste-based discrimination is a crime, then corruption is one of the
impediments that prevent this crime from being punished and thus reasonably
prevented. A law against corruption could act as a catalyst in the process
of bringing positive changes in the unacceptable state of affairs in India's
policing institution. In that the anti-corruption movement must attract
Dalit rights activists. Unfortunately the experience so far has been
disheartening.

Another accusation against the movement is that it will not deliver results
since the movement cannot deal with the neo-liberal capitalist environment
that the governments holding fort in New Delhi have followed. It is true
that development in India has been conceived as form of licence to undertake
'a breakneck speed plunder' of natural resources and the intentional
promotion of an exploiting regime favoured by private capital. To plot
India, with any sense about its destiny in the future without depending on
private capital, is engineering predestined disaster. The time where a
single state can change the economic roadmap of the world is over, some 30
years ago. What is required however is to bring transparency, accountability
and public audit into the development schemes that the private and public
sector are competing in implementing in the country. Even before conceiving
a project, it must be mandatory to conduct a public audit of the project
proposal. It is built into a reasonable extent in the local self-governance
framework in India. However, corruption has so far prevented this proviso
from being properly implemented.

Widespread corruption predates economic liberalisation in India. Those
political parties that have externally opposed liberalisation of all
governments, themselves are corrupt, proven from their own governments'
records in at least two states, Kerala and West Bengal. Not many are immune
to corruption in India, material and intellectual.

There are many more reactions for and against the movement that took their
turns to surface, stay or disappear in the past three weeks in India. The
true test to the movement and that of the maturity of the government has to
be read in how both these entities have dealt with each other until now and
in the future. It is also equally important to see how both these entities
will deal with the demands to make the consultation process as much
inclusive as possible. In that, at the moment while the government has shown
the maturity expected in a democratic framework by willing to hold joint
consultations with the movement, the movement and those who led it have
shown their resilience and resolve by marching ahead in the direction they
originally started their journey.

It is true that the* Jan Lokpal Bill* has its defects. It is neither an
all-inclusive nor an exclusive movement so far. It is an important movement
nonetheless, which has the potential to positively change the destiny of
India.

What is important at the moment for the country, for all those who are
interested in brining an end to the reign of corruption, is not to smother
it with disconnected criticism, but to breathe life into the process by
joining the debate.

# # #

*About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional
non-governmental organisation that monitors human rights in Asia, documents
violations and advocates for justice and institutional reform to ensure the
protection and promotion of these rights. The Hong Kong-based group was
founded in 1984. *

-- 
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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