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From: AHRC News <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 10:18 PM
Subject: INDIA: The state of the republic at 61
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*FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE*
AHRC-STM-015-2011
January 25, 2011
*
A Statement by the Asian Human Rights Commission*

*INDIA: The state of the republic at 61*

The integrity of a republic and the determination of its people depend upon
the legitimacy of their government. Since declaring the Union of India to be
a sovereign, socialist, secular, democratic republic that assures its
citizens justice, equality, and liberty and to be a nation that endeavours
to promote among them all fraternity, 61 years ago, the country today has
still a long way to go to realise the dreams of its founding fathers. The
Indian Constitution, a social document, as referred to by Granville Austin,
drafted to further "the aim of social revolution or attempt to foster this
revolution by establishing conditions necessary for its achievement" depends
much upon a government that has a democratic executive which is stable,
responsible and impartial. ( Image:the Preamble of the Constit ution of
India.)

The defining characters of the country's executive has deteriorated to such
levels over the past 61 years that it is not even a shadow of what it ought
to be. Instead of undertaking honest endeavours to correct this and to
contribute to the nation building exercise, today, despite of its symbolic
value, the integrity of the republic according to the determination of a
large section of its people, has been reduced to the hoisting of the
national flag in states like Jammu and Kashmir, that struggles to return to
normalcy from the externally sponsored and internally motivated civil war.

After declaring the country as a republic 61 years ago and 63 years since
gaining independence from colonial rule, India today is still an
underperforming state for more than 60 percent of its population. Despite
maintaining a steady and decent growth rate for the past five years, the
country is home for an alarmingly high number of persons, estimated to be 75
percent of its population, who live below the poverty line. This is a
condition worse than in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Corruption, the omnipresent cancer that has eaten the country from within,
has reduced the executive and the administration to a condition comparable
with that of a termite ridden tree that waits for a strong wind to complete
its downfall. Irrespective of their ideologies the political parties that
exercise power in India have only competed between themselves to preserve
the corrupt bureaucracy that always yearned to remain the mainstay of the
politicians and rich. Despite the weekly reportage of corruption, where
politicians and bureaucrats have been exposed of swindling millions worth
tax payers' money there is no healthy debate yet in the country of the
urgent requirement for a credible corruption prevention agency. One among
the many that already exist, the Central Bureau of Investigation, yesterday
was pulled up by the Kerala High Court and cautioned that the Court would
have to take action against the Bureau should it continue intervening in the
investigation of a polit ically sensitive murder case to save some of the
high-ranking, as well as corrupt politicians. The Bureau is a typical Indian
example of how these agencies are created and accustomed to doing anything
else other than their statutory mandate, which is to detect, investigate and
prevent corruption. The allegations of corruption against the present
Chairperson of the National Human Rights Commission, is yet one more example
of the stark reality of the extent to which corruption has eaten into the
justice system of the country. The continuing reluctance of the Union
Government to initiate an investigation into the scam, that it its wild
course has tainted further none other than the Supreme Court of India, the
highest seat of justice in the country, shows the extent to which this
cancer has nullified the notion of justice in the country.

Corruption however is not a problem in itself. It is the result of much more
deep-rooted issues within the administration of a state. In that, corruption
flourishes only to the extent to which an environment for corruption
prevails. This environment includes not only the administrative mainframe,
but also the general perception of the public about the character of their
state. For the ordinary citizen, there are some key institutions that
represent the symbols of the state. Of them one of the most important
element is the police, as the police is not only a uniformed state presence,
but is also the symbol of its authority. A reform to the existing framework
of administration is thus not possible in India without addressing the
entrenched problems relating to policing in the country. Foremost in the
list is the practice of the use of brutal force with impunity. So far the
national debate to bring about changes to this unacceptable status quo has
halted at the stage of the Parl iamentary Select Committee proposing drastic
revisions to the proposed law against torture. The Committee has suggested
overarching revisions to the proposed law, which in its present form is none
other than an eye wash legislation to justify India's proposal to ratify the
United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman,
Degrading Treatment or Punishment. The proposed law against torture, the
Prevention of Torture Bill 2010 in its current form will be just one more
legislation to justify the usual claim of the Government of India before the
international community that the country has adequate legislation to
guarantee the rule of law. What is ignored by international jurists and kept
hidden by the country's government is that despite having laws, justice and
redress remains a distant dream for most in the country.

This denial of justice is visible in the extrajudicial executions and
encounter killings reported from states like Manipur and Jammu and Kashmir;
in the despicable neglect of the state and central government of the tribal
and otherwise ethnically minority communities that led to the disastrous and
dangerous growth of armed extremist groups like the Naxalites and the other
armed militia groups; in the cases of torture reported from the length and
breadth of the country; in starvation deaths, forced evictions and bonded
labour.

Every case of unresolved human rights violation that is reported from India
is an assertion that the country needs much more than the pseudo chivalry of
the hoisting of a flag in a state that has an alarming and disproportionate
army presence. Every case of rights violations in the country is yet another
cry for help of a hapless citizen who is denied his or her fundamental right
to be treated equally and humanely that the constitution they believe in
guarantees.

January 26 will be meaningful only if the guarantees in the constitution
that proclaimed India a republic 61 years ago are also realised. Until then
the Republic Day will remain an occasion for the annual remembrance of that
great nation India once resolved to become and Indians thus far have failed
to realise.

# # #

*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.*


*International Human Rights Day 2010 - Download our pre-print PDF version of
the annual reports here<http://www.humanrights.asia/resources/hrreport/2010>
.*


-----------------------------

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-- 
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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