http://www.frontline.in/stories/20110923281902400.htm



*Why all in one?*

USHA RAMANATHAN

*Given the experience with extraordinary powers vested in any institution,
the wisdom of having a super-powerful body must be debated.*

SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AFP

*TEAM ANNA MEMBER Arvind Kejriwal burns a copy of the government's Lokpal
Bill during a protest in New Delhi on August 4.*

IT is axiomatic that it is the state that has the exclusive power to make
law. As is true of many axioms, this too reflects reality only in part;
various groups do, in fact, influence lawmaking. The Disabilities Act, 1995;
the Right to Information Act, 2005; and the National Rural Employment
Guarantee Act (NREGA), 2005, are obvious examples. Yet, alongside this
experience is the intransigence of the state, which the Lokpal debate has
thrown into sharp focus.

The government's Lokpal Bill, 2011, was introduced in the Lok Sabha on
August 4, following tough talking and hard bargaining by five members of a
civil society team. Yet, this Bill manages to remain status quoist even
while ceding some ground. Its ‘Lokpal' will be a chairperson with a maximum
of eight other members, half of whom are to be judicial members. The pool
from which it will draw its candidates is populated with sitting and retired
judges of the Supreme Court and Chief Justices of High Courts. The
appointment process, too, is more of the same.

The government is, by instinct and practice, loath to dilute its control
over what it creates, and the Lokpal Bill too is witness to this. The
chairperson or any other member is to be removed from office on the grounds
of misbehaviour on a report from the Supreme Court, on the basis of an
inquiry made by it. The Supreme Court may, however, act only when the
reference has been made to it “by the President”, on a petition signed by at
least a hundred Members of Parliament or, again, by the President, on a
petition from a citizen where the President is satisfied that such reference
should be made.

Acceding to the demands of the team of five, the Bill has accepted the
formula of a separate investigation wing and a prosecution wing to be
constituted by and under the control of the Lokpal. There is relative fiscal
autonomy where the Lokpal is to prepare its budget each year, which is to be
sent to the Central government “for information”.

The sticky issue of whether the Prime Minister should be subject to the
Lokpal's scrutiny has been answered by including him – “after he has
demitted the office of the Prime Minister”. Ministers, MPs and high-ranking
officials are within this law, but not the lower bureaucracy.

The inclusion of any person belonging to “any association of persons or
trust (whether registered under any law for the time being in force or not)
in receipt of any donation from the public” is being read as a way of
getting back at a public that has placed the government in this difficult
spot. The notable absence of corporations from the ambit of this Bill has
drawn adverse comments, especially given the role corporations are to have
had in so many recent scams.

Prosecution or disciplinary proceedings, the power of search or seizure,
provisional attachment of assets, and the power to recommend transfer or
suspension of a public servant who is connected with allegations of
corruption are all in the Bill, as are provisions providing for declaration
of assets and adverse inference where assets not declared are found in the
possession of or in use by a public servant.

Perhaps the most striking deviation from extant law is the change in the
nature of the ‘sanction' power. The power of the executive to withhold
sanction for prosecution has been a huge hurdle to holding the corrupt
guilty. The government Bill hands over to the Lokpal the power to give or
withhold sanction. The Jan Lokpal Bill, too, adopts this approach. Neither,
however, acknowledges the changes that have been introduced in the Torture
Bill, which, carefully, does not leave the power in anybody's discretion.
It, instead, requires that where the decision is not to allow prosecution,
reasons have to be given, which may, then, be subject to judicial review.
That places a check on arbitrary use of power by any agency. The formula in
the two Bills relocates the discretion in the Lokpal but does not change the
nature of that power to exercise discretion.

The presumption of ‘good faith' – that everything done by a public servant
shall be presumed to be done “in good faith or intended to be done in the
discharge of official functions or in exercise of his powers” – has been
retained.

Generally, then, the government Bill is more of the same with one
significant change, some reluctant halfway measures, and much that has been
left unconsidered.

The Jan Lokpal Bill has moved through many versions. In June, version 2.3
was made available on the website of India Against Corruption (IAC). Mildly
put, this Bill is markedly at variance with the government Bill. This Bill
envisages a Lokpal that would have “administrative, financial and functional
independence from the government”. To achieve this, the Lokpal is to have
its own investigating agency, which it will supervise, monitor and direct.
It will appoint and dispense with the services of its investigators.

The arm of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) that investigates
corruption is to be excised from it and subsumed in the Lokpal. Some years
ago, in an effort to give functional autonomy to the CBI from its political
masters, the Supreme Court shifted control of the CBI to place it in the
Central Vigilance Commission (CVC). The Jan Lokpal Bill works on the
unreasoned belief that the Lokpal will not succumb to the temptations of
such extensive control over the investigating agency.

*Powers of the Lokpal*

The powers of the Lokpal are elaborate and have been set out in two clauses
in the Bill. They include the power to

“Appoint judicial officers, prosecutors and senior counsel.”

Initiate and monitor the progress of prosecution.

“Attach property and assets acquired by corrupt means and to confiscate them
in certain cases.”

“Recommend cancellation or modification of a lease, licence, permission,
contract or agreement if it was obtained by corrupt means, and to recommend
blacklisting of a firm, company, contract or any other person involved in an
act of corruption.” In this case, the public authority shall either comply
with the recommendation or reject it within a month of receiving it. If
rejected, the Lokpal “may approach the appropriate High Court seeking
appropriate directions to be given to the public authority”.

“Ensure due compliance of its orders by imposing penalties on persons
failing to comply with its orders.”

“Initiate suo motu appropriate action... on receipt of any information from
any source about any corruption.”

Make recommendations to public authorities, in consultation with them, “to
make changes in their work practices to reduce the scope of corruption and
whistle-blower victimisation”, and the authority concerned is to send a
compliance report within two months.

“Prepare a sentencing policy under the Prevention of Corruption Act and
revis(e) it from time to time.” This is an extraordinary prescription by
which parliamentary power to detail the policy of punishment is moved to the
discretion of the Lokpal. The punishment for corruption can be set anywhere
between six months and a life sentence.

“Prepare an appropriate reward scheme to encourage complaints from within
and outside the government to report acts and evidence of corruption.”

Enquire into the statements of declaration of assets “filed by all
successful candidates after any election to any seat in any House of
Parliament”.

Punish a public servant with imprisonment up to six months or fine or both
“if he fails to comply with its orders for ensuring the compliance”.

Assume competence to investigate any offence under any other law while
investigating an offence under the Prevention of Corruption Act.

Interception and monitoring of various media of communication can be
undertaken at the behest of the Lokpal – and a member of the core committee
claimed recently that this was non-negotiable.

The breadth of the Lokpal's interest includes within it complaints of
corruption against the Prime Minister, Ministers and MPs, and the higher
judiciary, and these shall be looked into by a bench of seven members if the
Lokpal so decides. The Lokpal will, among its other functions, protect the
whistle-blower and the Right to Information (RTI) activist; deal with
grievances where there is a delay or non-performance in delivery of
services; and ensure that its own staff does not practice corruption.

A complex appointment process and a complaints procedure by which anyone may
complain to the Supreme Court, which will then inquire and decide whether a
Lokpal is guilty as charged, are the bulwarks offered against excessive
power corrupting the Lokpal.

The inadequacy of these protections has been raised and needs much
discussion and reasoned debate.

A multiplicity of powers – to legislate, judge, punish and protect – are to
be placed in this institution of the Lokpal. There are questions about
constitutionality, separation of powers, checks and balances, and the
consequence of absolute power waiting to be addressed in this Bill. It does,
however, provide a useful counterpoint to the government Bill.

A postscript: although having the Lokayuktas in the Act is one of the
demands, the Jan Lokpal Bill does not elaborate on this theme and stops with
stating that “similar provisions for Lokayuktas... will have to be
incorporated in the Bill”.

The National Campaign for People's Right to Information (NCPRI) has proposed
a “basket of measures” in place of an omnibus law that vests all the power,
and responsibility, in a Lokpal. These largely draw upon Bills pending in
Parliament and work at improving and strengthening them. These are the
Judicial Standards and Accountability Bill, the Whistleblowers' Bill, the
Lokpal Bill and the toughening up of the Central Vigilance Commission Act,
2003. In addition, a National Grievance Redress Bill, 2011, has been drafted
to cover the complaints that arise in the delivery of services.

The NCPRI position is that loading one institution with the work of dealing
with corruption and inefficiency in the lower bureaucracy, protecting
whistle-blowers and RTI activists, and confronting big-ticket corruption
would make for an impossible agenda. As for the judiciary, the independence
of the judiciary must be preserved, as must the separation of powers; and
dealing with matters of standards and corruption in the judiciary would best
be by a separate law. The NCPRI documents are offered as critiques and
drafts meant to facilitate discussion.

Suggestions emanating from the Lok Satta and the Foundation for Democratic
Reforms reflect on the proposals currently on the table and open the door
for discussion. A Bahujan Lokpal Bill, 2011, sent to the Standing Committee
brings into the debate the issue of representation in such a powerful body
and the recognition of the diversion of funds and policy focus from the
Scheduled Castes, for instance, to other purposes as happened during the
Commonwealth Games.

Some of the changes that may be brought may need a constitutional amendment.
Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhi made a suggestion in Parliament that
the Lokpal may be made into a constitutional entity, a suggestion that has
been seconded by former Chief Election Commissioner T.N. Seshan.

Given the experience with extraordinary power when vested in any
institution, the wisdom of having such a super-powerful, insulated body
awaits serious deliberation.

*Usha Ramanathan is an independent law researcher working on the
jurisprudence of law, poverty and rights*

_______________________________________________




-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
*
*
*The UID project i**s going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
predecessors of Hitler did, else how is it that Germany always had the lists

of Jewish names even prior to the arrival of the Nazis? The Nazis got these
lists with the help of IBM which was in the 'census' business that included
racial census that entailed not only count the Jews but also identifying
them. At the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, there is an
exhibit of an IBM Hollerith D-11 card sorting machine that was responsible
for organising the census of 1933 that first identified the Jews.*
*
*
*http://saynotoaadhaar.blogspot.com/*
*http://aadhararticles.blogspot.com/*
*http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1*<
http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_162987527061902&ap=1>

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