The country is being inexorably pushed
towards a confrontation of unpredictable consequences as a result of the
seeming reluctance of the Prime Minister to assert his authority and steer the
country out of a messy situation in which it finds itself. This situation is
characterised by a widening divide between the Government and large sections of
public opinion on the issue of setting up a permanent and independent
investigating and prosecuting machinery to be called Jan Lok Pal to deal with
corruption.
2.The movement for setting up an independent
and powerful Jan Lok Pal can no longer be dismissed as purely a movement
spearheaded by a politically conscious and manipulative elite claiming to
represent the so-called civil society. Growing sections of the people identify
themselves with the objectives of the movement as a result of Anna Hazare, an
anti-corruption activist with no political ambitions till now, assuming its
leadership.
3. His fast and the surprising
public response to it made the Government realise belatedly that it can no
longer drag its feet on the demand for setting up such a machinery as
successive Governments have been doing for nearly 50 years. A government
rattled by the extent of the public response to the fast swung from one extreme
of inaction to the other extreme of a series of ill-advised actions as a result
of which the moral authority to steer the anti-corruption movement has slipped
from the hands of the Government into the hands of some civil society activists
headed by Anna Hazare.
4. The Government let itself be stampeded
by the increasing public anger on the issue of corruption into recognising the
questionable credentials of Anna Hazare and his close advisers as
representatives of the civil society as a whole.They did not represent the
civil society. They represented strong segments of non-governmental opinion
which demanded immediate action on the Lok Pal issue.
5. There are many dimensions to the
movement for the creation of a powerful and independent Jan Lok Pal such as the
procedure for its constitution, its powers to investigate and prosecute the
corrupt and its jurisdiction. Civil society in any democracy is not monolithic.
Nor is the world of non-governmental opinion. There is always a plurality of
centres of non-governmental initiatives, leadership and ideas.
6. A confused Government reacted to
the growing public support to the movement headed by Anna Hazare in a manner
that made the civil society appear to be monolithic and conferred on Anna and
his small circle of advisers the right to speak exclusively on behalf of the
entire non-Governmental society. The existence of a plurality of centres of
opinion was lost sight of in the panic response to the growing public support
for Anna’s fast. This plurality of centres existed not only in the
non-governmental segment having no formal role in policy-formulation, but also
in that segment, which was not governmental, but had a role in policy
formulation in the form of different political parties and their elected
representatives in the Parliament and the State legislatures.
7. As a result, the exercise to give
shape and structure to the Jan Lok Pal mechanism came to be restricted to the
Government or the State on the one side and an articulate, but over-projected
segment of non- Governmental opinion which sought to reduce the exercise to one
of forcing the Government to accept its point of view as representing that of
non-Governmental India as a whole.
8. When the Government realised the
inadvisability of such as exercise, its valid reservations on the manner in
which Anna Hazare and his advisers were seeking to monopolise the national
debate though they had no national following were sought to be misrepresented
by Anna and his advisers as reflecting the Government’s unwillingness to create
a powerful and independent machinery. Differences on important individual
issues such as whether the proposed Lok Pal should have jurisdiction to
investigate and prosecute the Prime Minister and members of the judiciary too
have been sought to be misrepresented as additional arguments reflecting the
Government’s opposition to the creation of a Lok Pal.
9.Non-governmental bodies act as
advisers on policy-making. It ought to be left to the Government to decide
which advice will be followed and which will be rejected. The Government has the
right to reject or modify for valid and cogent reasons.It is so in all
democracies.
10.Since independence, we have had
dozens of non-Governmental groups----some permanent, some temporary--- which
had advised various Governments on what policies should be followed. The
Government did not always accept all their advice, even if it was given
unanimously.
11. For the first time in our
history, we have created a non-Governmental group which is trying to dictate
policy to the Government. When any of its advice is rejected, it is threatening
to take the issue again to the streets in order to force the Government to
accept it. Anna Hazare has put the Government on notice that he would go on
fast again from August 15 if a solution satisfactory to his group is not found.
12.No Government worth its salt can
let itself be dictated by a segment of non-Governmental opinion. The Government
has to reject firmly, but politely the pretensions of Anna and his team to be
the custodian of the morals of our society as a whole. They have to have an
important role in policy-formulation on anti-corruption issues, but as advisers
with a restricted mandate and not as non-governmental dictators with a
self-assumed, unrestricted mandate.
13. The Government has done well to
initiate an exercise for consultations with the other political parties to
reach a national consensus. It is incumbent on the other political polities to
respond positively to the Government’s initiative. Any attempt to take
advantage of the Government’s self-created difficulties will be short-sighted
and could weaken democracy in the long-term.
14. Even while initiating this
exercise, the Government should not burn its bridges with the Hazare team. It
should try to give the new exercise a larger format by bringing in other
non-governmental segments while not diluting the primacy of the Anna Hazare
group.It should play the role of the first among equals, but not as the sole
arbiter of the national debate on the Lok Pal issue.
15. The unfortunate rhetoric
emanating from individual Ministers of the Government as well as from
individual leaders of the Congress (I) should be lowered in order not to add to
the heat and bitterness of the debate. There is a need for deft handling and
political delicatesse which could come only from the Prime Minister and from no
one else. It is time for him to take the debate to the people through the media
as well as through direct interactions with the people during tours across the
country.
16. If these steps are not taken,
there could be a danger of the debate getting out of hand and leading to
unpredictable consequences.
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