I love this idea - I've always been baffled about what the going rate
was and what sorts of bribes were appropriate or expected. What do
other people think? How do you know how to bribe?

-- Charles

A Goan is compelled to pay a Rs 70,000 bribe for permission to rebuild
his family home in Margao after he is told, “Can’t be done, sir, not
until...”

For refusing to pay off a municipal employee, a 45-year old man in
Ahmedabad is kept waiting a year to get his birth certificate.

A New Delhi resident buckles and palms a 100-rupee note to a policeman
accusing him of illegally operating his car as a cab while driving a
foreigner friend to Agra.

IPaidABribe.com registers an astonishing assortment of first person
anecdotes detailing bribe-giving across India. From Agartala to
Vijayawada, it is a first-of-its-kind chronicle of you-and-me Indians’
brush with an array of corrupt government officials. By graphically
detailing and recording the universality of this Indian problem,
IPaidABribe wants to analyse patterns, change processes and tackle
corruption.

Launched six weeks ago, IPaidABribe (IPAB) is already making waves on
the internet. It was set up by the Bangalore-based Janaagraha, a
non-profit that works to change the quality of life in urban India by
working with both citizens and governments. In the short time since
its launch, thousands of Indians have gone online to record their
experiences under a laundry-list of headers: I paid a bribe, I didn’t
pay a bribe, I didn’t have to pay a bribe, I don’t want to pay a
bribe.

On its website, IPAB asserts that it wants citizens to “uncover the
market price of corruption” and illustrates it with a graphic of a
corporate employee bribing a policeman with his official entitlement
of Sodexho food coupons. The numbers, types, locations, frequencies
and value of bribes paid provide a snapshot of the extent of
corruption in different cities. Janaagraha then uses them to argue for
improved governance systems, tighter law enforcement and stricter
regulation, thus reducing the scope of corruption.

According to Janaagraha co-founder Swati Ramanathan, recording a
bribing incident is like owning up a sin in a confessional. She says
IPAB is a “mandi”, a marketplace where prices for various services are
openly shared. In order to encourage more ‘confessions’, IPAB does
maintain the anonymity of the bribe-giver. It does not unmask the
bribe-taking government official’s identity either — it aims to change
processes and not target individuals.

As an early endorsement for its crusade, Janaagraha has just received
a $3 million grant from the social philanthropy investment firm,
Omidyar Foundation, backed by Pierre Omidyar, the founder of auction
website eBay. This is the foundation’s first grant towards government
transparency outside the United States. Enthused by the responses to
IPAB, Sunlight Foundation, an American firm that works in digitising
government documents in various US States, is talking about launching
a similar initiative in the United States. The Foundation said the
website would help heighten awareness about the subtle forms of
corruption rampant in the United States.

The results are already beginning to show. Karnataka’s transport
department has gleaned details of the bribes collected by transport
officials based on the locations mentioned by the bribe givers. It has
sent show-cause notices to 20 senior officials.

The initiative is headed by T.R. Raghunandan, an upright IAS officer
who quit the civil service to join Janaagraha. In the “Ask Raghu”
section of the website, the former official provides advice on how to
deal with a policeman demanding a bribe or how to get a driving
license or a passport without giving a bribe. Often, average people
pay bribes because they do not have access to information on either
the process or the fee to be paid for a particular service.

The website is supported by a dozen volunteers from Bangalore’s IT
industry. To get more Indians involved, the website will launch in
several regional languages. By speaking up, Indians will perhaps shame
the system into reforming. The Goan who paid the bribe to restore the
family home speaks up on IPAB: “I am Indian, but I’m ashamed of this
bribery culture in all walks of life.”

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