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India faces risk of its own Arab Spring

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By Paul de Bendern

NEW DELHI | Wed Aug 17, 2011 1:31pm BST

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - An anti-corruption movement led by a feisty 74-year-old social activist is snowballing into one of the biggest challenges in decades for the ruling Congress party and if not contained risks sparking India's own version of an Arab Spring revolt.

While no one is expecting an Egypt-like overthrow in the world's biggest democracy, a galvanised and frustrated middle class and the mushrooming of social networking sites combined with an aggressive private media may be transforming India's political landscape.

Anna Hazare has quickly become a 21st century Mahatma Gandhi inspiration for millions of Indians fed up with rampant corruption, red tape and inadequate services provided by the state despite the country posting near-double digit economic growth for almost a decade.

"Democracy means no voice, however small, must go unheard. The anti-corruption sentiment is not a whisper-it's a scream. Grave error to ignore it," Anand Mahindra, one of India's leading businessmen and managing director of conglomerate Mahindra Group, wrote on Twitter.

Hazare's arrest on Tuesday, only hours ahead of a planned fast until death against graft was the last straw and sparked spontaneous protest across the country of 1.2 billion people.

The young and old, rich and poor, without apparent political affiliations, took to the streets in a rare voice of solidarity -- a potential lethal cocktail for any party in power in India.

Politicians are increasingly being judged on governance rather than old caste and regional ties - as has already happened in states like Bihar - and the new social shift will push national parties to be more responsive to voters' needs.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, the Congress party of the Gandhi-Nehru dynasty and the police stood isolated over the decision to arrest a man for planning a peaceful fast.

The Congress has for the past year reeled from mounting corruption scandals, including allegations of millions of dollars in kickbacks in the sale of mobile phone licences in what is emerging as India's biggest-ever graft.

A former telecoms minister, top corporate executives and senior Congress party officials are in jail awaiting trial.

Indians have routinely voted out governments and in that sense the anti-graft movement is different from those sweeping the Middle East.

The next election is due in 2014 and an opinion poll last week by India Today showed that if elections were held today, Congress would just about lose out to the main opposition party.

WAKE-UP CALL

In a passionate speech in parliament, 58-year-old opposition leader Arun Jaitley said protests witnessed over the past 24 hours, reaching even the remotest villages, were something he had not seen in his lifetime and must be a "wake-up call" for politicians to put their house in order.

Students, lawyers, teachers, and business executives have taken to social networks like Twitter and Facebook to spread the message and vent frustration against corruption.

"These protests are part of a global phenomenon, thanks to technology and a more proactive media," said N. Bhaskara Rao, social researcher and chairman of independent think-tank Centre for Media Studies.

Most people do not expect India to follow the example of North Africa and the Middle East. But one of five Indians go hungry and almost half the vast population is poor -- causes for potential unrest.

India has been governed for most of the time since Independence in 1947 by the same family dynasty. For decades Indians united under these leaders but this year has seen a seismic gap emerging between the old guard and a vibrant and younger population.

"This has the ingredients of being India's own non-violent Arab uprising," said Savio Shetty, a stock market analyst in India's financial hub Mumbai.

"But the dish needs to be cooked and looked after! Tahrir square was a rebellion against the government itself ... of a 40-year tyrannical rule ... things are quite different here."

Singh remained defiant in parliament over the arrest of Hazare, maintaining that anti-graft laws should be discussed and passed in parliament and not by activists in the streets.

"When people exhaust their capacity for tolerance, then you should take it that it is a beginning of some kind of revolution. Now it has gone above people's tolerance level," Hazare told Reuters in a recent interview in his home village.

India ranked 87 in Transparency International's index on corruption in 2010, behind rival China and polls show corruption vies with the high cost of living as the number one voter issue.

What is also apparent is that the anti-corruption protests have shown the limited influence of opposition parties, largely sidelined. They will need to reform to win over an increasingly disenfranchised population.

NEW POWER -- MIDDLE CLASS

The bulk of India's political activism has been those aligned to political parties or paid to protest on their behalf.

But in recent years a growing and more prosperous middle class has given up its traditional distaste for politics and is seeking ways to exert greater influence.

"The new corporate middle class has little patience with the politics of dignity and identity that are -- for better or worse -- central to Indian politics," wrote Vinay Sitapati in the Indian Express newspaper.

Almost half of India's 1.2 billion population are farmers, many live on government subsidies and are reluctant to challenge local and national governments over endemic graft.

But with costs of living rising fast and daily news reports of state officials with meagre salaries caught with bags of cash and kilogrammes of gold, or registered as owners of multi-million-dollar homes, patience seems to have been snapped.

"Now citizens want to play a more participatory role in governance," said Rao. "This will bring in a sea change in Indian politics."

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2011/08/17/uk-india-protests-arab-idUKTRE77G2BR20110817
 
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We are proud of this. The support for Anna has been unprecedented. We are all waiting for this revolution to happen ! The time has come to overthrow this Congress govt.
 
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why are the Indians overthrowing their govt.?,,Isn't India prospering under them?, this is not a jibe at India, rather a question.
 
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why are the Indians overthrowing their govt.?,,Isn't India prospering under them?, this is not a jibe at India, rather a question.

No, we are not prospering under this govt. Only our leaders are prospering !
 
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why are the Indians overthrowing their govt.?,,Isn't India prospering under them?, this is not a jibe at India, rather a question.

India is doing well.

But since some want to do better than the common man through illegal means, the common man wants to tell them to wake up and smell the coffee!
 
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No matter which party comes to power, the situation will remain the same. I bet, even if BJP were to be in power today they would done the same thing as Congress.

Well, if this bill is passed, half of out MPs will be in Jail.



Have a look at this video. Arvind Kejriwal raises some very valid points. He alos talks about the rampant corruption in Hong Kong in the 1970s. When the public couldn't take it no more and came out to the streets, the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) was born.

Independent Commission Against Corruption (Hong Kong) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sorry if the video has already been posted.
 
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why are the Indians overthrowing their govt.?,,Isn't India prospering under them?, this is not a jibe at India, rather a question.

Just because a country is prospering doesn't mean that one should overlook the ills plaguing their society and one of the greatest ills that Indians face now is corruption.
 
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We are with you Annaji... We want India free from corruption. We want Jan Lokpal Bill not sarkari jokepal.

CONgress can't fool today's youth. They will have to pay for their ill deeds.
Jai Hind.
 
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Anna Hazare arrest: Global bank VP on 'fasting leave' from Hong Kong


MUMBAI: Checkered shorts and a Gandhi topi is a fashion felony. But 29-year-old Shailesh Saraf doesn't care; he has never blindly followed a popular trend. Currently on "FL or fasting leave", Saraf, a vice president with Morgan Stanley, is down from Hong Kong to campaign for the Jan Lokpal bill.

Saraf was among the 72 protesters who were fasting for the second consecutive day at Azad Maidan; two new recruits joined the fast on Wednesday. At the maidan, Saraf intermittently checks his Blackberry, not for investment updates or market movements but for news of Anna Hazare's release. For the most part, he sits on the stage, listening to people unspooling long speeches about the corruption they'd faced.

"When I was in India, I used to evade taxes. I don't even try that in Hong Kong. Here, I used to jump signals, I don't do that there," he confesses. "What I'm getting at is that I am the same person-I still want to reach my office quickly, still make more money. But there is a system I must follow. India needs to have a better system in place and the Jan Lokpal draft is the best piece of legislation drafted in India."

Saraf, who lives in Kowloon, says he dreams of a cleaner India to which he can one day bring his children back. "There isn't a magic wand, but this is as close as we can get to root out corruption," he says.

And then there was 60-year-old Ramji Rathod, a retired BMC safai karmachari who was worried about the weeds in his housing society. "I have cleaned the city for years, but haven't managed to get the BMC to clean up our society (BMC colony, near Arthur Road)," he gripes.

Many of those fasting solved crosswords, read books on corruption, wrote shayaris, prepared speeches or asked volunteers to photograph them. Some just slept.

There weren't many women in the crowd, but housewife Anita Singh from Panvel says she's supporting the Jan Lokpal Bill simply because she wants to be a part of this historic revolution. Nanda Mandlik (52) from Vashi was driven by another motive. A single mother, Mandlik drove an auto to earn a living, and raise her sons, but she routinely encountered bribery along the way, and she was there to lend volume to the collective voice.

Prem Shah (72) was among the oldest of the lot on day 2 of his fast. His email-unreasonableman.prem@gmail.com says a lot about him. "That's how I have been perceived by others; for I have done nothing wrong, not even paid a bribe," he says, a copy of John Perkins' Confessions of An Economic Hitman in his hand. Shah says what brought him there was government inaction with regard to illegal wealth stashed in Swiss banks.

At the other end of the age spectrum was 18-year-old Ranjit Bharadwaj who repairs air-conditioners and makes around Rs 2,000 a month. "No one listens to small people like me," he complains. "But there's no hierarchy here, and I want India to be just like this-the kind Hazare dreams of."

While Bharadwaj believed his was a lost voice, 49-year-old Chandrashekhar Patil chose, of his own volition, to keep quiet. Patil, heavily diabetic and suffering from high blood pressure, was ordered by his doctor to avoid speaking because voicing his views could get him agitated.

Lastly, US-returned Nitin Makhiya who has also been fasting since Tuesday says he misses food. "But hunger is better than the bitter aftertaste that an act of corruption leaves behind."
 
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I am all for the Arab Spring moment in India. ^^
 
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I'd beg hardcore BJP supporters to stay away from any of this, or else it would only effect our movement against corruption. Congress and the Govt. would get a chance to term it as politicaly motivated and its the last thing we would want.

---------- Post added at 01:36 AM ---------- Previous post was at 01:35 AM ----------

I am all for the Arab Spring moment in India. ^^
and i'm all for the jasmine revolution in china^^
 
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yeah.. your movement. what are u doing except talking big on internet?

we are the people hitting streets..
 
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