Political Corruption: A Way Of Life In India

Political corruption: a way of life in India

NEW DELHI: It’s a familiar sight during every election in India: a politician sits on one side of a giant scale while supporters heap cash and valuables on the other side until he is lifted into the air.

Politicians also dole out liquor, clothes and money to woo votes from the poverty-stricken masses. Powerful gangsters employed by politicians openly roam India’s political badlands - Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh - to force people to vote for them.

Little wonder a survey released this month by Berlin-based Transparency International ranked Indian political parties among the world’s most corrupt. The non-governmental organization, which evaluates and ranks corruption around the world, released its 2004 Global Corruption Barometer to coincide with the UN’s International Anti-Corruption Day on December 9.

India, the world’s biggest democracy and budding economic powerhouse, came in fifth behind only Ecuador, Argentina, Brazil and Peru. “The only honesty benchmark people use is whether a political party accepts money and gets the job done or whether another does not do the work after taking the money,” Indian political analyst Yashwant Deshmukh said.

Still, analysts admit, things are changing on the sub-continent. India’s economic reforms have over more than a decade been slowly breaking the vicious cycle between bribe money and everyday life. Private competition has been introduced into services ranging from telecommunications to electricity distribution.

“If these economic reforms are deepened, then eight out of 10 corruption complaints could go,” Deshmukh said. Nonetheless, “It will be very difficult to root out the corruption as it goes straight from the top to the bottom. We can only reduce it or block it,” said Kailash Koddukka, who heads the New Delhi-based anti-corruption lobby group Parivartan (Transformation).

“Too often people are just accepting corruption as a way of life. What we need is a thorough cleansing of our morals,” he said. Nearly a quarter of the elected members of parliament face criminal charges ranging from rape and kidnap to murder, and half risk jail on one offence or another, according to a study by the Bangalore-based Public Affairs Centre released in November.

“One out of two among them (over 50 per cent) have cases that could attract penalties of imprisonment of five or more years,” the study said. The statistics were compiled on the basis of information candidates filed with the Election Commission after the Supreme Court in March ruled voters had a right to know the criminal and financial history of election candidates.

However, only those who have been convicted are barred from contesting the polls and under India’s clogged judicial system it can take years for people to be tried.

Deshmukh said a thorough overhaul of antiquated electoral laws were needed as regulations such as a cap of one million rupees (22,000 dollars) on candidates’ election spending were “unrealistic.”

"It doesn’t cover even a fraction of the costs incurred by candidates. So he (a candidate) does not declare his actual expenditure or source of funding. The amount should be raised at least 10 times.

“And just like in the US, they should be allowed to raise the funds openly from business houses or other contributors,” he said. Analysts say another reason for the extent of bribery is that salaries paid to legislators are such a pittance that even if they saved every rupee, it would meet no more than 0.5 per cent of their expenditure on a single election campaign.

The result is that no government has been able to escape the taint of corruption. The previous Bharatiya Janata Party-led government was rocked in 2001 by secretly taped video footage allegedly showing senior politicians accepting cash bribes in exchange for pushing defence deals.

The ruling Congress party-led coalition government has not been able to escape scrutiny either. The BJP has criticized it for appointing “tainted ministers” who face criminal charges.

However, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his team of top economic reformers - Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram and Commerce Minister Kamal Nath - enjoy clean reputations and are working to usher in a new political era.

“I view them as a great improvement over the average calibre level of the politicians. But they have not been able to improve the government over which they preside,” said political analyst Pran Chopra.

Source: AFP

Not surprising that a developing likely furture super power would have such problems, the test is how it is handled. While the charges of such corruption being out in open is a good thing much needs to be done.

Officer Uses Ketchup To Fake Battle

The “Ketchup Colonel” has been thrown out of the Indian military for faking a claim for valor awards.
Col. H.S. Kohli was with an artillery regiment in northeastern India when he applied for military honors by claiming to have been involved in a raging firefight with rebels in 2003.
The “rebels” were local villagers who agreed to be splashed with ketchup, play dead and be photographed as proof of the “battle.” The awards were being processed when officials got a tip that the whole thing was a fake, which was then confirmed in an investigation.
In the wake of the incident, the Indian army’s policy of rating officers’ performance on the basis of “kills” and “captures” of militants has drawn increasing criticism, and other claims by officers for gallantry awards are under review.

Source: Army Times

WELL MAY BE SUPERPOWER IN MAKIN KETCHUP ...LOL... AND SOME DAY THEY WILL SAY AL-QAIDA INFILTRATED OUR KETCHUP FACTORY AND DESTROYED TWO TOMATOS BY BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL WEAPONS ...LOL...

Re: Officer Uses Ketchup To Fake Battle

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by liveshoaib: *
The “Ketchup Colonel” has been thrown out of the Indian military for faking a claim for valor awards.
Col. H.S. Kohli was with an artillery regiment in northeastern India when he applied for military honors by claiming to have been involved in a raging firefight with rebels in 2003.
The “rebels” were local villagers who agreed to be splashed with ketchup, play dead and be photographed as proof of the “battle.” The awards were being processed when officials got a tip that the whole thing was a fake, which was then confirmed in an investigation.
In the wake of the incident, the Indian army’s policy of rating officers’ performance on the basis of “kills” and “captures” of militants has drawn increasing criticism, and other claims by officers for gallantry awards are under review.

Source: Army Times

WELL MAY BE SUPERPOWER IN MAKIN KETCHUP ...LOL... AND SOME DAY THEY WILL SAY AL-QAIDA INFILTRATED OUR KETCHUP FACTORY AND DESTROYED TWO TOMATOS BY BIOLOGICAL AND CHEMICAL WEAPONS ...LOL...
[/QUOTE]

hmm....looks like someone is bitter over having started from the same point and currently being miles behind in the dust.

Re: Re: Officer Uses Ketchup To Fake Battle

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by nikhil25: *

hmm....looks like someone is bitter over having started from the same point and currently being miles behind in the dust.
[/QUOTE]

well nihkhil, we did not start at the same point because all of the military, financial and educational institutions were in india at the time of partition....

having said that, i would also like to make a point that no matter how ugly the democrtaic system is in India, the fact of the matter is that India has had a proper democratic system in place for all these years. We should give due credit to indian political leadership for this...

mob rule

"If India grew carrots, they (the west) wouldn't give a damn."

Corruption is not only in India it is even in all Muslim countries due to the rule of democracy, the laws are changin accordin to peoples wishes. We have example of India as worlds largest democracy run by the man made laws which have proved that it had failed and in all Muslim countries. It is just to secure the intrest of west, who says of the people by the people for the people rather it should be of the people by the people for SOME PEOPLE.

Unfortunately some muslims are callin for democracy, they play with the blood of muslims, we have an example in Iraq and is still goin on to process for HYPOCRISY.

*“A democracy is nothing more than mob rule, where fifty-one percent of the people may take away the rights of the other forty-nine.” - Thomas Jefferson *

As a non Muslim Thomas Jefferson got it but what happened to Muslims as they are Blessed with The Holy Koran(Allahs laws).... and sunnah of Prophet Muhammad SAW.....

Opening shop in India? Bring scissors to cut red tape.

By Scott Baldauf | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

NEW DELHI – So you want to start a business in India? Great. First jot down these rules. You will have to abide by them in order to get your permits from the Indian government. (And the state government, and the city government, too.)

Rule 1. Don’t grow too large. Any business with more than 10 employees will be covered by the Indian Labor Act, which requires strict hiring and firing rules, short working hours, and generous pension funds.

Rule 2. Leave your accounting software at home. The government requires that all bank records, for instance, be kept in books, in duplicate. Computers didn’t exist when the Constitution was written, so those records are invalid.

Rule 3. Don’t forget the Government Seal Act of 1862. A holdover from British colonial rule, all Indian businessmen and government agents must be able to seal certain documents, with wax, with the imprint of the East India Company. The British are gone, the East India Company is, too, but the act remains on the books.

If all of this is too complicated, business experts say, a frequent practice is to offer local government officials a small bribe.

Much has been done in the past decade to simplify business rules here - to the applause of the World Bank and foreign investors. The new government last month made clear that economic reform would be its top priority. But the challenges of giving India an economic makeover are vast. For one, many bureaucrats like to keep things as they are, since it is how they derive their power and income. Also, many rules protect Indian businesses from foreign markets, and removing them is cause for concern.

But as a new World Bank report makes clear, India must improve its investment climate soon - from easing regulations to improving roads, airports, and power grids - or it will remain mired in poverty for another century at least.

“Until India does more to simplify its regulatory environment and improve its infrastructure, it will never achieve [the government’s goal of] 8 percent growth,” says one Western diplomat based in Delhi, speaking privately. Many businesses are bullish on India today because of the potential they see, he adds, but “few of those businesses are finding profits today.”

India’s government leaders - many of whom set India on its current reform path after a 40-year flirtation with socialism - seem to recognize how much work they have to do. Last month, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, the chairman of the Planning Commission, India’s top economic panel, admitted that it would be difficult to meet his own government’s goal. But he promised more reforms and economic benefits to follow.

Meanwhile, as foreign investors have pumped nearly $3 billion in investments this year, India-based businesses complain that the country is still far too regulated. In a survey of business owners conducted for the World Bank, 51 percent of respondents said that regulations and corruption were “major or severe obstacles to growth.” One-third also cited poor infrastructure, such as bad roads or unreliable electricity. On average, Indian manufacturers face 17 significant power outages per month, versus one per month in Malaysia and around five in China, according to the report. “As a result, almost 61 percent of all Indian factories run their own generators. That’s a duplication that adds nearly 20 percent to many businesses’ operating costs,” says Priya Basu, who wrote the report.

**
The greatest regulatory impact comes from setting up businesses and closing them down. It takes a staggering 89 days to get government clearance to start a business, compared with 41 days in China and 30 days in Malaysia. And it takes 10 years to complete bankruptcy proceedings in India, compared with 2.4 years in China.**

India has made progress over the past decade. The rate of overstaffing - a result of labor laws that make it difficult to fire workers - has dropped from 16.8 percent to 10.9 percent since 2001. The number of days it takes for a shipment to clear customs has gone from an average of 10 days to 7.3 days.

But Bibek Debroy, author of “In the Dock: Absurdities of Indian Law,” says that the sheer number of regulations here leads to corruption. “With the multiplicity of laws and regulatory agencies, you have greater compliance costs,” he says, using a euphemism for “bribe.” “At least if we begin to see some movement on reform, then give it three or four years, and these issues will no longer be that important.”

Cut-paste galore?

Corruption in politics would be a nice topic to discuss.. but to throw curve balls like 'ketchup' major may just have diverted the thread to inaneness. Ah well.

Re: mob rule

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by liveshoaib: *
"If India grew carrots, they (the west) wouldn't give a damn."

Corruption is not only in India it is even in all Muslim countries due to the rule of democracy, the laws are changin accordin to peoples wishes. We have example of India as worlds largest democracy run by the man made laws which have proved that it had failed and in all Muslim countries.
[/QUOTE]

so dictatorships in muslim countries have no corruption and are successful?

name one, because every royal family of a muslim nation seems to get labeled as "kafirs" and traitors.