*Many Avatars of Indian Corruption*

*Satya Sagar*

To call Anna Hazare’s crusade against corruption a ‘second freedom movement’
may be hyperbole but in recent times there has been no mass upsurge for a
purely public cause, that has captured the imagination of so many.

For an Indian public long tolerant of the misdeeds of its political servants
turned quasi-mafia bosses this show of strength was a much-needed one. In
any democracy while elected governments, the executive and the judiciary are
supposed to balance each other’s powers, ultimately it is the people who are
the real masters and it is time the so-called ‘rulers’ understand this
clearly.

Politicians, who constantly hide behind their stolen or manipulated
electoral victories, should beware the wrath of a vocal citizenry that is
not going to be fooled forever and demands transparent, accountable and
participatory governance. The legitimacy conferred upon elected politicians
is valid only as long as they play by the rules of the Indian Constitution,
the laws of the land and established democratic norms.

If these rules are violated the legitimacy of being ‘elected’ should be
taken away just as a bad driver loses his driving license or a football
player is shown the red card for repeated fouls.

The problem we face in India is clearly that there are no honest ‘umpires’
left to hand out these red cards anymore and this is not just the problem of
a corrupt government or bureaucracy but of the falling values of Indian
society itself. That is why it is not clear at all whether the passing of
the Jan Lokpal Bill with its draconian powers of oversight over government
functioning will work as an effective measure against financial or political
corruption.

The other larger obstacle to actually bringing meaningful change in the way
India works lies only in the lack of clarity on what the term ‘corruption’
itself really means . The sources of this multi-headed evil run deep in our
society and must be identified, debated and finally uprooted in all its
forms.

The policeman or government official taking a bribe, the politician acting
as a middleman for a corporation and so on are common examples of corruption
in India. However going beyond the obvious meaning of corruption as just
financial fraud or bribery there is a need to look at the many other ways in
which established rules and universal principles are constantly bent to suit
one vested interest or the other.

Here is my take on what I think are at least *Ten Avatars of Indian
Corruption*:

1)   *Caste:* This is the oldest form of corruption in the Indian
sub-continent and one that continues to this day- the bending of rules in
favour of the ‘upper’ castes over the ‘lower’ ones. In traditional India
laws were always discriminatory in content, prescribing as they did
different kinds of punishment to people from different rungs of the caste
ladder for the same crime. Even today in many parts of India a *savarna *can
go scot-free after murdering a Dalit while the latter can be lynched for
even skinning a dead cow. People of the same caste favour each other over
members of other castes all the time in different sectors of Indian life
from government and business to sports and even crime. Even in Bollywood the
hero of every movie is a Singh, Sharma or a Verma and almost never an Ahir,
Topno, Pramanik or Sutar. For that matter, there are very few in the English
and Hindi language media too with such surnames. Next round Anna can maybe
target this form of corruption and kick some ass (in his inimitable Gandhian
way, of course) to set things right.

2)   *Class:* Money power has become the biggest bender of established rules
in India as the wealthy get away with almost anything and everything from
evading taxes and stealing common resources to changing national policies to
suit their business interests. Across political parties today members of
parliament have become puppets of different big Indian and even foreign
corporations and act against the interests of the ordinary Indian people.
Even more than the politicians, who are mostly middlemen, it is the Tatas,
Ambanis, Ruias and Mittals who wield real power in India. That many of these
corporate bosses have today joined the chorus of voices against corruption
is as dubious and laughable as Pappu Yadav going on fast in solidarity with
Anna’s movement.

3)   *Race:* Racism of skin color and looks is deeply rooted in a lot of
Indian society and is a constant source of discrimination in not just public
behavior but also national policy and politics. What else, if not racism,
could be the reason that much of India and the national media has not paid
any attention to the heroic ten year long fast unto death of Irom Sharmila
from Manipur for repealing the dreaded Armed Forces Special Powers Act while
a four day long fast by Anna Hazare has the urban middle classes all
emotionally charged up? And why else should every depiction of Mother India
be of a fair skinned Aryan looking lady with pink lips and not one with dark
skin or curly hair or north-eastern looks? Racism is surely one of the most
abhorrent forms of corruption possible in any society and Anna can help
change social attitudes next time by having a nice Santhal, Munda or Oraon
woman play Bharat Mata in the portrait behind him while he fasts on stage.

4)   *Gender:* The ratio of women to men in the Indian population has been
steadily falling in many parts of the country as a silent genocide takes
place every hour with parents willfully killing off their girl
children. According
to the UNICEF foetal sex determination and sex selective abortion by
unethical medical professionals has today grown into a Rs. 1,000 crore
industry. Women get routinely discriminated against in job selection, the
wages they get and the public and domestic violence they are subjected to.
Denying women their equal rights as Indian citizens is a form of corruption
that not only violates the Indian Constitution but also basic human
principles. One does not expect Anna’s movement to take on every issue in
Indian society but at least they can rebuff the public support that has been
expressed for their cause by the khap panchayats of Haryana!

5)   *Nepotism*: This is the most widespread form of corruption in the
Indian context with not just politicians but film stars and cricketers
promoting their kids over other more competent candidates all the time.
Power, wealth, beauty, talent almost everything it seems can be ‘inherited’
without any effort and leads to the accumulation of undue influence in the
same few families. The most glaring form of nepotism is practiced by family
run business houses of India where, irrespective of their competence or
ability, the reins of control keep passing on from father to son or
daughter. If Indians want the country to be run solely on merit and
transparent rules then they should insist that the CEOs of Indian companies
be selected on the basis of an all India examination where everyone can
participate. A severe taxation on inherited property as practiced in the UK
and other countries will also go a long way in promoting a truly merit-based
society.

6)   *Urban bias:* Here I am referring to the discrimination against rural
Bharat by urban India of course. Whether it be in terms of remuneration for
their work and produce, investment in infrastructure, job opportunities,
healthcare or education the rural Indian  is far worse off than the urban
one. Every national policy and rule is bent in favor of the cities and this
must end if India is to remain a united country for long. The city is always
prioritized over the countryside and it is ironic in some ways that almost
all the support for Anna’s Gandhian movement is coming from the big cities
and towns and virtually nothing from the villages.

7)   *Language:* Forget about the imposition of Hindi on the people of
southern India, it turns out that the most oppressive use of the ‘national
language’ is in fact in the so-called Hindi speaking states. Over a dozen
languages like Bhojpuri, Awadhi, Maithili, Rajasthani, Bundelkhandi, Sadri,
Chhattisgarhi are given short shrift by the champions of the elite
Sanskritised Hindi over the local languages of the northern Indian states.
The lack of educational materials in their mother tongue has resulted in low
literacy rates for both children and adults in these parts of India for
decades, keeping them at a perpetual disadvantage. In states where the local
languages are properly supported and promoted like in Kerala, Tamil Nadu,
Karnataka, West Bengal and Gujarat there is much greater literacy and also
empowerment of the people. Favouring Hindi or any language for that matter
over another is a violation of the principle of equal access to
opportunities and a form of corruption that has not been properly addressed
as yet in the country.

8)   *Education:* The open economic and cultural discrimination practiced
against the ‘uneducated’ people of India is a form of corruption that most
‘educated’ people don’t want to recognize because this obviously works in
their own favour. As a result of this bias those with degrees- real and
fake-  get paid many, many times more than those who never went through
school and confined to manual work of different kinds. Many well meaning
people think that the solution is to provide ‘education’ the masses of India
obfuscating the fact that the ‘uneducated’ need food, clothing, shelter and
dignified jobs before anything else. The worst aspect of this phenomenon is
that the poverty of the poor is blamed on their ‘lack of education’ and not
on the unjust economic structures of Indian society.

9)   *Religion:* The biggest religious discrimination in India is not really
against Muslims, who are at least organized and vocal about their problems,
but against the Adivasi populations of the country. Subsumed under the
category ‘Hindu’ there is no recognition as yet of their spiritual and
religious traditions that are distinct from Hinduism in many, many ways.
Several Adivasi groups in recent years have been demanding that the Indian
government categorise their faiths as a separate religion called ‘Adi-dharm’
or ‘Sarna’, a call that has repeatedly fallen on deaf ears.  Forcing
indigenous people, who form over 10 percent of the Indian population, into a
religious identity not of their choice is to deny them their Constitutional
right to freedom of religion. Instead of imposing Hindu gods on them and
seeking to ‘convert’ them to Hinduism with trishuls and Shiva lingas they
should be allowed to practice whatever religion they want, derived from
their own historical roots.

10)                   *Nationality:* India, for all its ancient glory and
history, is really a new nation forged together by first the Mughals and
then the British empire. The latter in particular forced dozens of smaller
nationalities to become part of the ‘Raj’, whose territory was inherited by
the current Indian Republic. Gandhi, more than anyone else in the Indian
freedom movement was sensitive to this and had in fact declared his support
for the demand for independence of the Naga people. Other Indian leaders
like Nehru and Patel looked upon themselves as the managers of colonial
property that the British had handed over to them. The reduction of the
entire idea of Indian nationalism to control over territory and domination
over smaller nationalities has been the biggest blot on the record of modern
India in the last six decades. It has led to countless killings of innocent
people and even crimes against humanity in the name of protecting the
‘integrity’ of the nation and is a corruption of every principle of
non-violence and humanism that Gandhi espoused.

Anna Hazare could perhaps take on the Indian administration to recognize the
rights to autonomy or even self-determination of all nationalities within
Indian borders that don’t feel or want to be Indian. Doing that will truly
make Anna a true inheritor of the Gandhian tradition, which is after all
about the fight for justice for every human being and much more than merely
sitting on a fast for a public cause or wearing khadi or leading a simple
life. When that happens, the sub-continent will surely say ‘We are all Anna
Hazare’ to the last man, woman and child.

*Satya Sagar is a  journalist and public health worker based in New Delhi.
He can be contacted at [email protected]*

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