Thursday, April 28, 2011

CBI plays soft ball

Indian Olympic Association chief and former head of the CWG Organising Committee Suresh Kalmadi has finally been arrested by the CBI for awarding Commonwealth Games contract to a Swiss company at an inflated rate of `141 crore and causing `95 crore loss to the exchequer.Kalmadi is allegedly accused of not only signing the contract as the head of the executive board of the OC, from which he was removed after the loot was widely reported in the media, but because of his pre-mediated and planned role much before the contract was awarded to Swiss Timekeeping.Kalmadi was instrumental in changing the specification for awarding the contract to the Swiss company and appointing personnel who toed his line. Kalmadi also removed officials who objected to the selection of the company on a single tender basis while ignoring MSL of Spain. For the Timing-Scoring-Result (TSR) System, MSL had quoted `45 crore but Kalmadi awarded contract to Swiss Timekeeping thus causing `95 crore loss to the exchequer. Out of this loss, `23 crore was paid for non-execution of any service.“Kalmadi was arrested for awarding the contract in a planned and pre-mediated manner to the Swiss company,” a CBI official said after formally arresting the Pune MP at 3.30 pm on Monday."Kalmadi threatened and coerced tender evaluation committee members to disqualify other bidders," the CBI said. Agency spokesperson Dharini Mishra said further investigations are on.The CBI has so far registered 10 cases in the scam related to the organisation of the event.
Five of these are against the OC, three against NDMC and one against SIS Live.More than six months after the sports extravaganza and a month after arresting two officials, the agency has finally pounced on the big cat.The same slow pace and over-cautious approach of the agency is visible in the 2G scam probe. Though the agency has named DMK chief M Karunanidhi’s daughter M Kanimozhi in the second chargesheet filed today, it has left out his wife Dayaluammal. After receiving Rs 100 crore on splitting with Sun TV, Dayaluammal along with daughter Kanimozhi and Sharad Kumar formed Kalaignar TV. This television company got unsecured loan which is seen as an alleged ‘bribe’ of Rs 200 crore from Shahid Balwa’s DB Realty for getting spectrum licence. After it was discovered and reported in the media, the money was given back to Balwa’s company.The CBI says it did not make her an accused because “she does not know English”. The agency ignored the fact Dayaluammal has 60 per cent stake in Kalaignar TV and being a majority partner, she is legally responsible for all the actions that her company takes.“We did not name her as an accused because she did not know English. Even her statement was recorded with the help of a translator. She had no active role and her signatures are not on any company document,” the CBI official investigating the case said. Kanimozhi was made an accused because “she was an active stakeholder, effectively dealing with (former Telecom minister A) Raja, Radia tapes and she was pushing Kalaignar TV in Delhi,” an official said.By filing the second chargesheet, the CBI has effectively concluded the 2G scam probe except the Loop Telecom, where some senior officials have stakes in Etisalat DB Telecom Pvt Ltd (formerly Swan Telecom Pvt Ltd) and Loop Telecom through Mauritius-based companies. However, the agency would find it difficult to move against ADAG chief Anil Ambani and Tata Group chairman Ratan Tata as Swan and Unitech involved in the 2G scam are alleged fronts of both the groups respectively. CBI officials admit that was as far as it could go but left little room depending on the circumstances. “We have to move according to each layer. If a layer leads to second layer we proceed. If we find no evidence leading to third level, we cannot proceed on the basis of presumed evidence,” a senior official handling investigation said. However, the CBI may file an additional chargesheet in the Loop case. The agency is moving slowly as it getting sanction against senior officials in a phased manner, according to sources. The high and mighty involved in both the 2G scam and CWG loot are actively involved in removing evidence. “This is what they are doing. What can we do about it,” admitted a CBI official.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Vedanta in a great rush to get Cairn deal through!

No one should be surprised why Vedanta Resources Plc is in a tearing hurry to take over Cairn India despite the issue being stuck in the Prime Minister's Office? The answer is simple: the LSE-listed firm of Anil Agarwal is eyeing mind-boggling profits by clocking an estimated revenue of $650 billion on an investment of mere $9.6 billion, where as the government should have the right of first option of purchase.
The oil discovered so far in the Barmer and Jalore districts, including Mangala region, is estimated to be over one billion barrels and further significant discoveries are expected to cross over 6.5 billion barrels in the entire state of Rajasthan. The value of the oil is over $650 billion given the average price of $100 per barrel that the company expects to make in a period of 30 years of the lease agreement.
A Bangalore-based lawyer Arun Agarwal has lodged a complaint with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and other ministers besides the CBI and the CVC alleging large-scale bungling in the whole deal.
On Tuesday, Vedanta bought 10 percent of Cairn India from Malaysian company Petronas which made a cool profit of $1.16 billion in four years. Vedanta paid a total of $2.1 billion for 14.94 percent of Cairn India.
“This clearly shows the profits Vedanta will make after it gets full control of the oil fields,” says Agarwal.
The direct cost of producing a barrel of oil, according to the website of Cairn India, is $5 and after meeting the financial charges etc it is $10 dollars per barrel. Cairn India owns 70 per cent of the oil producing fields while the state-owned ONGC owns 30 per cent. Cairn does not pay any royalty to ONGC.
There are pending disputes relating to payment of royalty and cess presently paid by ONGC and neither paid nor recovered as cost from Cairn. The excess liability (to be paid by Cairn) of ONGC on royalty alone is about Rs 12,000 crore. The deal also becomes cheaper to the extent that ONGC has to pay excess royalty.
“It therefore does not stand to reason as to why the oil reserves should be allowed by the government to be transferred for around seven billion dollars to Vedanta when it has the right of first option of purchase,” says Agarwal.
The matter of royalty is now with the CCEA headed by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. Law Minister M Veerappa Moily and the Solicitor General of India say that the royalty ONGC pays on entire output from Cairn India's oifields is cost recoverable.
“Somehow the original deal got structured in a manner by which the entire liability of royalty and cess devolved on ONGC and not on Cairn. The matter needs to be investigated and responsibility fixed,” the lawyer said in the complaint to the PM.
The oil ministry in the Cabinet note has admitted that Cairn could later play difficult. The Cabinet note says that Cairn has alleged that the non-inclusion of cess in the production sharing contract was “either a mutual or a unilateral mistake by the Government by playing fraud by diverting (original operator) Shell's attention away from cess during the contract negotiations.”
Vedanta is buying 51 per cent of shares of Cairn India at a price of around Rs 400 per share which amounts to approximately Rs 43,600 crore or $9.6 billion. Hence, by investing $9.6 billion, Vedanta is looking at profits of $600 billion, if $50 billion are subtracted as operational costs and other expenditures, according to the complainant, who terms the deal as "national loot".
“Under the circumstances, it is the collective responsibility of all the Ministers… including the CVC and the CBI that there is complete pre deal signing transparency so that allegations of crony capitalism/ bribery,/sell out / economic blunder are not leveled later on after the government approves the deal,” the complainant alleges.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

‘Corrupt’ panel: Where is it headed?

The whole issue of dealing with corruption is getting tangled in unsavoury controversies. The fight against corruption will be so badly mutilated that is perpetuators wouldn’t know from which side they were hit. Riding high on the Jantar Mantar success, the civil activists will realise their folly after they will be forced to leave the battle ground by forces that are all-powerful and mean.
Given the political inclinations and the fierce opposition it has from the Congress party and the ministers, the committee will just end up becoming a place of drinking tea, exchanging pleasantries and getting good coverage on national television, if subsequent meetings are held.
And the manner in which the activists went around declaring war against the establishment and then sneaking in a weak draft, it appears that we are poised to lose the war on corruption.
The first sign of split emerged from within the dharna members. They started picking holes over naming the committee members. Baba Ramdev wanted Kiran Bedi, who herself didn’t want to be a part of the draft committee. But the more serious damage was because of the inclusion of father-son - Shanti Bhushan and Prashant – in the draft committee to frame Lokpall Bill.
Barely had Baba backed off that allegations against Anna started creeping up. One Hemant Patil from Pune went on the stage raking old charges against corruption. It was alleged that he was a crony of Maratha strongman and Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar. Not many paid credence to Patil’s charges cause he couldn’t defend himself on being a crony of Pawar. The less said about Pawar, the better.
Since the daft notification, one thing has been consistent – people mistrust against the Bhushans. They are said to be taking up causes of public interest. Nevertheless the father-son is facing intense heat.
And all this is partly because Samajwadi Party of Mulayam Singh couldn’t see that a very good organized campaign could surpass the socialist’s fancy.
Then to add substance to the charges of their intention, Shanti Bhushan’s conversations with ‘dalal’ Amar Singh (Congress MP Raj Babbar has termed Amar Singh as a dalal) and Mulayam Singh were the centre of attraction once again. The timing of the repeated leak was purportedly to embarrass Hazare and company and even the Bhushans. Anna Hazare is unnecessarily batted for lawyer Shanti Bhushan. Anna should have realised that Shanti Bhushan has been the law minister and knows the tricks of the trade.
In the tapped conversations, Amar Singh is fixing deals with industrialists, transferring judges and bureaucrats and even talking about the legs of Jaya Prada and actresses like Bipasha Basu expressing their desire to meet up with Singh after having met him only once.
Why should the taped conversations become a topic alongwith corruption? Is Amar Singh looking at getting ban on the explicit conversations? The point is that Amar Singh will always allege that the taped conversations are doctored. The point is that the 2006 phone calls of Amar Singh present a birds eye view on the way the corruption happens in the country.
Given the laws in the country, Amar Singh and Shanti Bhushan, if the tapes are found to be genuine, have never had to explain how they could fix postings of judges. Perhaps, given the legal power they enjoy, it is likely that the taped conversations are buried in court cases for a very long time.
In the end, the society members who launched the anti-corruption agitation between cricketing break, may end the stir and walk out with a dignified face. At present, the civil society committee members are on the backfoot.
They presented a diluted draft to the ministers. WHY? Will Anna managers explain why they cheated the nation by presented a different draft to the ministers? After circulating a draft of the Bill, they went to Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee and gave a changed version. Arvind Kejriwal claims that he is updating the versions on the internet after incorporating suggestions from the people. Is that how they are going to make laws in the country and fight corruption? Is he going to make laws for the people?
Given this kind of drafting and changing of law points, some very angry people are not going to appreciate personal ideas of this civil society group.
In all probability, many people are already moving the courts against the selection of committee members and choices before the Supreme Court could be limited. So even before June 30, we could have the courts intervening and staying the drafting, because the left out group of civil society members are going to argue on the manner of the selection of the five members.
Certainly this raises questions why are we going in for another government-appointed body or law when those implementing it will be the same class of people. Given the fierce opposition, the Hazare campaign has faced it doesn’t look that the committee will be able to see the June 30 deadline. Anna himself has come to realise that he may not be able to push for the Bill dateline of August 15. Will this exercise come to a naught?

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Anna campaign cost Rs 31 lakh

Moved by Anna Hazare’s campaign against corruption, corporate houses, various social and religious organisations and individuals liberally donated the organization, India Against Corruption (IAC), to the tune of around Rs 1 core out of which it spent Rs 31 lakh.
IAC got a total of Rs 85 lakh (Rs 85,75,469) through cheques, cash and funds transfer from various organizations, corporate houses and individuals for launching the campaign to move the Lokpal Bill. And donations are still floating in, say officials.
And out of this, the IAC spent Rs 9,61,578 on tentage and public address system at the Jantar Mantar, the venue for the campaign that caught world-wide attention from April 5 to 9.
Transporting volunteers and worker for the agitation in taxis and private cars, cost the IAC nearly Rs 4,61,588.
One of the biggest support, the IAC got for the campaign was through the internet. Nearly 50,000 people had expressed support through the Internet and the IAC website was the hub of online activity. The website and internet cost Rs 8,93,938. For the entire printing material including pamphlets and banners, the campaigners have paid Rs 7,32,624.
Interestingly, the lowest expenditure for the campaign was towards food and beverages, as the agitation was a hunger strike. It just worked to Rs 81,751.
The costing admits Ashwati Muralidharan, spokesperson of the IAC which has its head office in Kaushambi in Ghaziabad, is not only for the five-day agitation at Jantar Mantar but from a period from January to March.
However, former IPS Kiran Bedi said the four main movers – Arvind Kejriwal, Agnivesh besides Bedi and Hazare had extensively toured India for five months preceding the New Delhi fast unto death. “We have traveled throughout the country for five months and attended hundreds of seminars to explain our viewpoints. It is because of the extensive touring that we have got such support.”
The expenditure however, does not include three-month expenditure of the tours of the four activists.
According to sources, the money involved could be much more as few corporate houses and even politicians had funded many activists and actors to stand up for the cause. Many Bollywood personalities had flown from Mumbai to Delhi to express their solidarity for the campaign.

Freedom fighter’s family gets help, too late, too little

Families of the martyrs who laid their life for the country are leading uncared and poor lives, ignored by the State and even the people.
Grand son of the national hero, Shaheed-e-Azam Udham Singh, who assassinated Michael O Dwyer, Governor of Punjab when the Jallianwalla Bagh massacre was ordered in 1919, is living the life of a labourer earning meager amounts for his daily bread.
Till this day, Jeet Singh, grand son of Udham Singh, alonwith his family, is surviving on wages that he earns working at private construction sites in Sangrur district, carrying bricks on his head.
Promised help by former President Gaini Zail Singh besides a host of politicians and chief ministers of Punjab, Jeet had not found his fortune change. He was living a life in utter poverty and neglect.
But for writer, Shivnath Jha, who has written an explosive yet simple book, ‘Forgotten Indian Heroes and Martyrs: Their Neglected Descendants’, it was a sordid tale that brought tears to his eyes.
“I was really moved seeing Jeet Singh working as a labourer. When I set out in search for the families of our freedom fighters, I had never imagined that I would see this. As an Indian I felt ashamed that the families of the martyrs were so neglected,” says Jha at the launch of his untiring effort.
“I traveled from Mumbai to Punjab like a beggar. I had no money and yet I carried on. My life was like that of a dog. Have we stopped caring? Today, when I look back, I feel that India has really not cared about the families of the martyrs,” Jha said with tears rolling down. From a newspaper boy to a writer, Jha has come a long way as he penned his book.
However, Rajya Sabha member Vijay Darda, moved by the plight of the families donated Rs 11 lakh to Jeet Singh.
Senior journalist Ajay Jha, who wrote the preface of the book says, “I hope people of the country and the government of India wake up to help the families of the martyrs and heroes.”
Jeet Singh, accepting the cheque from Darda, said, “I am thankful to all and specially Jha and Darda for helping us out. I have hope and will not have to work as a labourer to make my ends meet.”

Monday, April 11, 2011

Corruption: A long battle

Corruption is omnipresent in the country and Anna Hazare and even thousands of his likes cannot eliminate it. At best they just can stymie it, if ever they are more than successful. But if you start believing that it will be wiped out in one go, you could be sadly mistaken. Given the rot in our life, where corruption has become part of the system, it will take ages and a long fight, a very long fight indeed, to be free of the menace.
India is perhaps one of the most corrupt countries in the world. And we don’t need Transparency International to tell us so.
From getting a driving license to space spectrum, everything is up for grabs. Money is no more given and taken under the table but it is now the ‘system’. Clerks claim bribe money as their birth right. The passport verification officer who comes to verify, rightfully demands his share of doing you a favour by coming to your house and give you good marks that would enable you to get the document to travel out of the country.
Who will fix the beat constable, local clerk or even safai karmchari who comes to seek Diwali gifts?
And then we have prime ministers, ministers, bureaucrats, judges taking huge amounts as bribes at the higher levels.
Will the Lokpal be able to stop that?
Corruption has grown in size and intensity despite the number of agencies floating around. Today, the anti-corruption and policing paraphernalia floating around in abundance is unable to eliminate corruption. India has the Central Vigilance Commission, the Central Bureau of Investigation, and several other watchdogs and policing organizations.
Each state police has an anti-corruption branch and each public organisation maintains vigilance group and department. In addition, India is burdened with Economic Intelligence Council with RAW, IB, CEIB (Central Economic Intelligence Bureau), DRI, DE, DGAE, CBEC, CBDT, customs… phew! These acronyms and abbreviations have even stopped making sense.
On top of it, the Income Tax Department maintains its own corruption wing and is scanning tax records and tapping phones. (Radia tapes are a boon because of this snooping around.) In the infamous 2G scam, the country knew the scam was happening. A newspaper was crying hoarse but the perpetrator, A Raja, was crowned telecom minister again in the UPA II. Only when the Supreme Court was critical of Raja did the shameless government wake up and asked him to go. Look at the way the 2G scam is being probed. Besides CBI, Income Tax, IB etc, it is being investigated by PAC and JPC of the Parliament. And even if Raja is nailed, is his boss who got the Rs 214 crore bribe amount even bothered that it could possibly put him in prison. The 2G spectrum loot is now an open secret.
Nevertheless the scams continue to grow. Today we are concerned with Commonwealth Games loot, Adarsh scam, money laundering, black money, Antrix scam...
Despite the plethora of agencies looking at these scams, people are still walking through the system, like in the case of Commonwealth Games. Suresh Kalmadi, Sheila Dikshit, Tajender Khanna. Manmohan Singh, no matter how innocent he may claim to be, has not owned up to the Antrix deal. The case of Singh is different. He claims to be innocent but various scams have taken under his guidance and chairmanship of leading the club. Ignoring or looking the other way or even outright inefficiency is also corruption.
The corrupt netas are still zipping around in beacon cars with impunity.
The moot question is will another anti-graft body with another fancy name, the Lokpal, be able to make the difference. It’s just not going to happen even if Lokpal Bill with tremendous powers becomes a functional authority.
What we require is ‘honest’ people not organisations and more rules and laws. It’s anyway complicated out there. What we need is better implementation of existing laws. And if it comes to that, certain modifications in a few rules will help. Like for instance, the powers of the CBI to go after administrators above the rank of joint secretaries. The agency is impotent when it comes to probing ministers and secretaries and needs nod of higher ups.
Even if the Lokpal comes into existence, from where will the people come to change the system?
The top bosses of investigating agencies will still be appointed by corrupt political leaders who become ministers. We need resilience of the people against corruption. Let us promise to ourselves that we are not going to bribe our ways through even if means waiting for licences or delayed Government clearances.
We, the people of India, need to change to stand up to corruption – at every level. Let us take a pledge today that no matter what, we are not going to pay the babus and netas. Can we stop seeking favours? Can we start waiting in long queues?
To weed out corruption, we need concerted effort. While we support Anna Hazare in getting a Lokpal, let us change ourselves.

Poll reforms next in line

Taking the war against corruption to the second level, crusader Anna Hazare said citizens must have the right to reject candidates during elections as part of electoral reforms after completing the Lokpall fight.
A victorious Anna, after successfully making the UPA Government bend down to set up a committee to draft the Lokpall Bill, asserted that it was the right time in the country to bring in the required changes and weed out corruption.
"If we talk of removing 100 percent corruption, we can achieve 90 percent by the Lokpal. Rest 10 percent would be achieved when we are able to change the way elections are fought in the country. We should be able to reject undesirable candidates. The election system needs a change," Anna said at a press conference at the Press Club of India on April 10, 2011.
Ruling out contesting elections himself, Anna said elections in the country had become a very expensive affair. "It takes Rs 6-7 crore to fight elections these days. Votes are bought for Rs 100 or a bottle of liquor or giving a saree. I cannot even think of doing that," he said and added that he would indeed float an organisation that would work for public awareness.
As for the composition of the draft committee on Lokpal Bill which had raised several heckles, Anna sought to clear the air saying the members were selected after much deliberation.
The committee has lawyer father-son duo, Shanti and Prashant Bhushan, besides Anna's think-tank, former IPS officer Kiren Bedi and RTI activist Arvind Kejriwal.
The Baba had wanted inclusion of former IPS officer Kiran Bedi on the panel while voicing concerns over nepotism.
Anna, who still stays in a temple in his village in Maharashtra, said that Bhushans were included as the committee needed some legal bend also as each clause of the present legal system had to be dealt in detail. "I talked to Baba Ramdev and told him that Bedi herself did not want to be on the committee. All the minor differences will be sorted out," Anna said. He ruled out any change in the membership of the committee.
Meanwhile, Kejriwal and Bedi did all the explaining at the much-awaited press conference. While agreeing to declare their assets, the draft committee member said that views of other members would be sought before the committing but added, "That should not be an issue. We will declare all our assets," Kejriwal said.
Bedi urged the media not "to smell a rat in everything" while Kejriwal said the media should not see "conspiracy in everything".
The committee is expected to meet on April 16 and the draft would be prepared in full public glare.
The hard copies ought to be sent to each Gram Sabha so that everybody's suggestions are incorporated, Anna, a former Indian army soldier, said.
The Bill would be presented in the Monsoon session of the Parliament and if the political leaders fail to pass it by August 15, "we will again resort to this blackmail, if it is being termed so," Anna added.
While Chief Ministers Narendra Modi and Nitish Kumar got a pat from Anna for their efforts on rural development, Modi fell short of getting 100 percent marks from the Pune crusader. "The way the Chief Ministers of Gujarat and Bihar have worked in their states, this should be adopted by other chief ministers. The chief ministers of other states should also work like this. I will accept Modi as 100 per cent ideal when he brings Lokpall in the state," he said.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Fight corruption

This is no time to celebrate as it is no real victory. At present we
are just ensuring that the committee that drafts a ‘Lokpal Bill’ will
have voices like that of Shanti Bhushan and Prashant Bhushan besides
that of Anna Hazare.
Even if we get the Lokpal Bill passed in the Assembly till August 15,
are we ready to boot corruption from the country.
Unless we can get rid of corruption and uproot the corrupt elements
from politics and bureaucracy (including not only top babus but to the
last chaprasi or traffic cop), we should not sit back.
We should continue to resorting to the Boot it campaign.
I urge you to stop paying bribes. Unless we come forward and take
initiative, we will not get a foothold.
I urge my brothers and sisters to join Bharat Rakshak, a organisation
that fights corruption and works for the country.

Friday, April 8, 2011

SC issues notice to Rahul, others in 'rape case'

New Delhi, April 6
Congress Member of Parliament Rahul Gandhi will perhaps face the toughest question of his political career as the Supreme Court today issued notice to Rahul Gandhi and five others on a petition filed by former MLA Kishor Samrite challenging Allahabad High Court order in an alleged gang rape case.
Apex court Bench of justices V S Sirpurkar and T S Thakur while staying the HC order of Rs 50 lakh fine and a CBI probe against Samrite, gave Rahul, Uttar Pradesh government and others four weeks to file their replies.
Hailing from Madhya Pradesh, Samrite, had sought to find out victim Sukanya and her family, which he alleged have been missing since the infamous rape incident, as was reported in website www.indybay.org and other portals.
According to reports, on December 3, 2006, Rahul Gandhi along with seven friends including four foreigners (two each from Italy and Britain) had “gang raped Sukanya Devi” in a VIP guest house in Amethi. Sukanya later with her mother went to the Amethi police station and even approached the National Human Rights Commission and the National Commission for Women to seek justice but to no avail. However, the victim and her parents were untraceable from January 4, 2007.
Samrite had alleged that Sukanaya and her parents were held captive by Rahul and sought directions to the police for producing them in court. Videographer Dhrupad and a cameraman from a news channel, who later recorded statement of Sukanya are also reported missing.
In the High Court, a girl did present herself in the court and said her actual name was Kirti Singh and that Balram Singh and (Sumitra alias Mohini Devi) Sushila are her parents and their identification was done by Amethi police station in-charge.
Kirti told the court that neither she nor her parents were under illegal detention of any person nor has she any information regarding the news item being displayed by the
website.
However, Samrite maintains that the girl and her parents were “implants”. UP director general of police Karam Veer Singh in an affidavit in the High Court “admits that particulars of the girl produced in the Court only partially matches with Sukanya”.
“No documentary evidence was provided by Kirti and her parents in the High Court to prove their identity,” says Samrite.
On the basis of deposition made by girl, the high court imposed Rs 50 lakh fine on Samrite and ordered a CBI probe. Samrite moved the apex court.
However, after the Supreme Court issued notice on Wednesday, Samrite was called to the CBI headquarters by DIG Rajiv Sharma. The former MLA, in the apex court, has alleged that the agency is “hounding him” and “trying to arrest him by exercising harassing tactics upon the old and aged parents”.
Lawyer Abhishek Manu Singhvi, a Congress leader, had sent a legal notice to the website, Hinduunity.org. Congress spokesperson Manish Tewari said he would “check the facts”.

Not just off-season masala

Immediately after cricket frenzy, social activist Anna Hazare has helped in cementing the bonds between the people in a lean season.
Anna by going on a fast unto death has given a little to everybody, from 'somebodys’ to nobodys’.
He has given TV channels and media enough corruption masala to keep the TRPs high and viewers glued to a cause which is the topic of platitudes after two large Patialas.
Social activists, civil right citizens and nukkad and small time organizations have got a platform to express their presence. Have you heard of a group Unemployed Computer Teachers Association with a membership of 3,000? This group exists and was present in full strength of motley two dozen shouting slogans in front of rolling TV cameras.
And this has happened across the country – from Pune to Patna from Lucknow to Ladoo Sarai.
Then Anna got support from actors, doctors, engineers, scientists, students, teachers, employed or otherwise, political and non-political, non-criminals… to even criminals. Pappu Yadav, in Patna’s Beur jail facing a life term in CPI-M MLA Ajit Sarkar murder case, is also on a fast unto death against corruption.

Netizens and mobilites have been flooded with SMS and e-mails seeking support for the cause of the Pune crusader. An example – Candle march by Trans-Hindon Residents Welfare Association in Vaishali and Indrapuram in Ghaziabad, UP or Life Care Foundation, Varanasi, is taking out a candle march for a corrupt-free Bharat in support of Anna Hazare. Wont you like to join in and become a concerned citizen?
Anna is demanding a 50:50 representation for civil society activists and government
representatives on a joint committee for drafting an anti-graft bill. The government is more than ready to accept the demands, but only at an informal level.
In an election season - Tamil Nadu, Assam, Puducherry, Kerala and even Assam - where the Congress party is eying to win at least 4 out 5 elections, Sonia Gandhi and her managers would be highly disturbed with the developments kicking off from Jantar Mantar. No wonder she said she was disturbed and backed up cause of the aam admi.

One wonders why that the activists Agnivesh and Arvind Kajriwal are in talks with minister Kapil Sibal, who has on record publicly defended his predecessor, A Raja, who is now in jail for the 2G scam that is anything between Rs 30,000 crore to Rs 1.76 lakh crore. They are in talks with the wrong minister for a right demand, which the government was ready to accept. The minister said the present committee would be an informal one to which the activists were not sure how to react.

Bring a law or setting up a Lokpal immediately is not feasible, even if the Prime Minister or President of India personally promise to do so today. Laws are made and for that the Parliament has be in session.
There are hundreds of dharnas that take place at Jantar Mantar, but no group gets so much hype. We need to think positive ways of encashing this before it becomes too late or it goes into the wrong hands. But the big question is – will corruption ever stop.
One thing is important, we are united against corruption. Let us be frank… Anna Hazare will stop someday but corruption will go on and on. But the fight must go on.

Monday, April 4, 2011

The magic of being Mr Sharad Pawar

Did you enjoy the game? Well in all the hulla buloo and glory of the balls, it seems we have forgotten the man behind the greatest cricket show on earth. Sharad Chandra Govindrao Pawar. We have forgotten to honour Mr Sharad Pawar.
And it’s not for cricket alone that he deserves the distinction of being given a standing ovation. He is one of the few politicians who has seen it all, been there and done that without getting involved in any scam or any corruption case.
Man of many seasons, he has walked across various tides without a scratch. The wind blows in his face and he couldn’t care less much like a camel walking the Thar desert facing sand dunes.
Like him nor not, but you cannot ignore Mr Sharad Pawar, agriculture minister of the country and chairman of International Cricket Council and ‘National’ Congress Party president.
Latest doing the round is that Pawar flew with Shahid Balwa to Dubai. Does it matter that he flew with the 2G scam accused (Yes Balwa and Pawar flew together to Dubai - on a date...). Hardly! Of course, Mr Pawar couldn’t have remembered the 37-year-old budding business honcho. Balwa’s company got Rs 1.32 crore from the NCP for flying him around during 2008 elections. This was the time Balwa was trying to get the 2G spectrum from A Raja. Eventually, Balwa is alleged to have paid Rs 214 crore bribe through a net of three companies that landed at Mr M Karunanidhi’s doorstep.
But what is the connection with Pawar. Nothing, if you believe Maharashtra Home Minister RR Patil. However, there is an interesting twist to the Pawar-Balwa link apart from aircraft usage by the NCP strongman.
Lawyer Prashant Bhushan has sought to link Swan Telecom promoter Balwa to a Central Minister (Pawar). Interestingly, CBI joint director YP Singh, who was handling the 2G scam case, took voluntary retirement from the primer investigating agency to join the ICC. There is a possibility that Singh could have given all the good tips to ICC to benefit the cricketing body. Mr Pawar still is out of focus. When NCP boss says that he is not friends with Balwa, who is just too young, it fails logic why no one is ready to buy the argument.
Is there just too much coincidence!
In fact people have always let Pawar beep off the radar and who has never really got bowled.
Abdul Karim Telgi, accused for making printing and selling fake stamp papers, landed in police net for stealing government stamps worth Rs 23,000 crore from railway wagons between 1997-2003. In a narco test, Telgi specically named Mr Sharad Pawar, as the man who was involved in the racket.
The Telgi clip was repeatedly aired by the news channels without any impact on Pawar. An accuse in a case can name his conspirators but if the law allows him to escape scrutiny, it doesn’t augur well for a prudent and balance legal system like ours.
And even social activist’s Anna Hazare’s campaign against Pawar didn’t pay any dividends. Hazare and other Maharashtra leaders have to the extent of pointing fingers at Pawar for his close releationship with underworld don cum terrorist Dawood Ibrahim. Not much has come out on that score though people would like to believe otherwise.
Pawar, a Sagittarius born on December 12, 1940, is considered to be one of the richest politicians of India, though on paper he hardly worth a couple of crores. Pawar has deep-rooted sweet interest in sugar industry in Maharashtra. No wonder that sugar prices in the UPA regime under his excellent guidance had reached a record-high. Ditto for all the commodity items like wheat, onion…
He now has ventured into education and real estate, albeit through the back door. Lavasa is just a case in point, which is being linked to the agriculture minister.
Off the record, people in Baramati are ready to explain what all Pawar owns, runs or has interests in. The figures can be astounding.
There are no permanent friends or foes in politics and no one knows it better than Pawar.
Ambitious Pawar branched out from the Congress party as he could not digest the idea of Italy-born Sonia Gandhi leading the nation. He formed the NCP, which is now an ally of the UPA.
And politics alone could not have captured the fancy of the Maratha strong-man. His foray into cricket should not be surprising. He became the chief of the cricketing organization, the BCCI, the richest sporting body in the country. After three-years, Pawar had enough of national cricket and ventured into the big league, the ICC. And since then its been smooth sailing, despite the fact the Indian Premier League fiasco also happened during this phase. Lalit Modi, the man who the IPL muck has been unloaded, is refusing to come to India. Is it the Pawar-factor at work?
Now Balwa has come out and openly told a court and CBI officials that nothing will happen in the 2G case or the aircraft linking to NCP. Pawar has always been controversial and yet managed a thriving political career sprinkled with scams taints. The beauty is that sahib, as he is fondly called by his admirers, has had a fairly good track record.
Pawar’s power, reach and craftsmanship are unimaginable. And what Balwa says is not without reason. There is a strong underlined message and the script is being rewritten as it tends to spoil the cricketing party. Is the underlining by Balwa being taken too seriously?

Netas big Tikaits of reservation

After the courts cracked the whip, the Jat after blocking trains and traffic in Haryana and Uttar Pradesh for nearly a month squirmed. However, the indomitable community, which is filled with colours of nationalistic fervour was swayed by small time Tikaits, who are bound to bounce back ...


Picture of a village in Western Uttar Pradesh is that of prosperity and wealth. Jats have slogged it out, bargaining hard for the sugarcane crops and making it big. Today a tractor in a house in Chaprauli or Kasana village in Uttar Pradesh does not sound out of place. In fact, it fits in the rural environ in the cow belt but not in a village in Andhra Pradesh or Assam. Normally, a Jat farmer is affluent and also powerful in his village.
Would he require reservation in a Central Government job? The bigger question is should we be doing away with this whole bogey of reservation, which is dividing the society rather than bridging the gap? Has reservation outlived its purpose? Has the Constitution overdone it? We need honest answers to these questions, not poodle faking responses.
President Pratibha Patil says the Constitution has served its purpose and fulfilled the aspirations of the people as desired by the founding fathers. With no offence meant to the first lady, I beg to state here that Patil's assertions are far from reality. And it's not without reason. The truth is that the Constitution has served the purpose of politicians and ruling elite and certainly not fulfilled the aspirations of the people in general as the President wants us believe. The founding fathers had themselves made it a point that certain provisions need a time-bound honest review. Perhaps, the statute book did the trick for the first ten years or so.
But an honest review has never happened. Reservation is one of the sore point that has been allowed to fester for far too long. It’s time we take worthwhile steps and resolve the vexed issue which is aggravating by the day and instilling resentment and bitterness among different communities.
Dalits, Backwards, (scheduled) castes and tribes… all have got some sort of surety with reservation in place. Education, jobs and even legislature, reservation breeds differences between communities. The other day, Samajwadi Party leader Mulayam Singh sought reservation for Muslims in Parliament and state assemblies. Quota is here to stay from 27 percent in education to 50 percent in jobs. The so-called suppressed people have now become privileged class as they are reserved for some reason or the other. Even though the Supreme Court has capped the upper limit at 50 percent, states like Tamil Nadu and Karnataka are under litigation where caste-based reservation fraction stands at 69 percent.
So a Dalit, who has been suppressed for hundreds and hundreds of years, after Independence, got a job in the Central services. Fine, so far. Then he or she got promotion after promotion, and retired from the top-level of government service. The same Dalit's son or daughter now gets the same treatment. The system continues and spreads out. From 5 to 7.5 percent reservation, successive governments instead of reviewing the policy judiciously, saw the vote-bank advantage of extending and increasing the percentages.
Instead of extending reservation benefits to economically backward or geographically disadvantaged people, politicos of various shades have mindlessly been pushing for caste-based reservation.
Naturally, there are many communities which have been left out of the race of getting plum government jobs or seats in educational institutes. More importantly, a few wannabe netas of these communities find a short-cut to success by raking up 'reservation' bogey and whipping up passions. Tikaitism is gripping Bainsalas and the likes of Yash Pal Malik, the latest neta on the block.
Malik extensively toured northern states in the last couple of months to garner support for the agitation and then launched it on one fine sunny March morning. The march was slow. Trains were the easy target. Hundreds of train services disrupted. Initially, authorities ignored the plight of lakhs of people caught in cross fire due to the unwarranted agitation. They woke up to the problem only when the newspapers started highlighting the problem.
The Jats had arrived. A handful of them had done in days what Gujjars managed to achieve in months.
The news became a talking point. Uttar Pradesh chief minister behen Mayawati saw a god sent opportunity in the agitation and tried tow exploit the situation to her advantage by wooing the Jats away from her arch rival Chaudhary Ajit Singh and his Rashtriya Lok Dal party. However, the Uttar Pradesh Government lent a passive support to the agitation, while Haryana CM bhai Bhupinder Singh Hooda activelty backed the Jat stir. Train routes from Delhi to Lucknow, Jaipur and Hisar were blocked. By doing so they might have scored a point but lost the argument. Later, the Allahabad High Court had to step in directing the Government to restore train services. Yet the agitation went on unstinted. What is more, the agitators even went on to threaten to choke Delhi. Now the Supreme Court has stepped in pulling up both the CMs for their unprincipled support to the agitation.
Nevertheless, the Jats are losing ground. Not many are falling for the reservation demands of the community. In the Army, the Jats have a whole regiment dedicated to their community. The regiment has got all the recognition due to it for its valour and sincerity. In the agricultural fields, they toil like none else and make the moola. The 1857 Mutiny against the British had started from Meerut and so did the agitation for reservation. But both are poles apart. Today, the Jats are on a sticky wicket that can be bowled or even stumped if they try and score too many points with this one.