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Indian spy agencies to come under parliament oversight?

bhagat

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NEW DELHI: A serious move is under way to bring the functions and finances of India's domestic and external spy agencies under parliament's oversight.

In a clear indication of things to come, a draft law, albeit from a private member, was introduced in parliament last week that seeks to both empower the snooping agencies as statutory entities and make them answerable to a committee under the prime minister.

According to Congress MP from Ludhiana Manish Tewari, who drafted the private member's bill and introduced it in parliament, Indian intelligence agencies are no legal entities and there is no control on how information they gather is used.

The bill seeks to bring the Intelligence Bureau ( IB), India's internal intelligence agency, the Research and Analysis Wing ( RAW), its external spy outfit, and the technical intelligence collector National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO) under parliament's purview.

If the bill becomes law, it would provide the agencies enough legal safeguards while bringing in oversight in the form of a National Intelligence and Security Oversight Committee with members from both the government and opposition in it.

The bill, which took its present form over the past two years relying on replies to questions Tewari asked inside parliament, was also inspired by research carried out by the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA) and the Observer Research Foundation (ORF).

"The bill has suggested a structured mechanism for the oversight of intelligence agencies while taking into consideration the concerns of the intelligence community, incorporating enough safeguards against misuse of information," Tewari says, hinting at political misuse.

Though the ideals are lofty, the big question is why such important legislation has been brought to parliament in the form of a private member's bill when the record of such bills being passed is remote, as per data available with the PRS Legislative Research.

"Since 1952, only 14 private members' bills have ever been passed by parliament and the last one was in 1970," according to the PRS Legislative Research study.

But Tewari is positive about his effort.

"The reason for introducing it as a private member's bill is that there can be an informed discussion. In most instances, the government agrees in parliament to consider a bill of its own. We have to wait and see how this works out. But it is an idea whose time has come," he said.

Government officials indicate the idea has indeed caught the fancy of National Security Adviser Shivshankar Menon, a committee of secretaries and the home ministry.

Former home secretary G.K. Pillai himself assured Tewari that his bill is under study as there is a consensus in the government on the need for such legislation the need for which has been mooted even at the level of Vice President M.H. Ansari.

But former national security adviser Brajesh Mishra fears that a parliament oversight may hinder the working of the intelligence agencies. Tewari underlines that the bill has enough firewalls that allow the prime minister to exercise discretion on what may or may not jeopardise their operations and functioning.

"Our agencies are, in a very real sense, shadowy outfits. The drafting of a private member's bill on intelligence is long overdue and welcome," says Srinath Raghavan, a senior fellow at the New Delhi-based Centre for Policy Research.
Indian spy agencies to come under parliament oversight? - The Economic Times
 
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Crap.These Parliamentarians are the most corrupt ever.CIA can report to Senate because they know that Senators are not that corrupt.
 
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This is a good move.

In a democracy, the parliament should be able to oversee all the areas of functioning of the state from security to welfare.
 
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Crap.These Parliamentarians are the most corrupt ever.CIA can report to Senate because they know that Senators are not that corrupt.

Politicians are corrupt everywhere.

American politicians are no messiahs.

Besides, if you can't even expect these politicians to take proper care of the intelligence agencies, how the hell can you possible expect them to take care of the entire country.

The very reasoning you offer defies logic.
 
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No we can't trust the member of Parliaments in these issues. Plus it will give them a secure environment to run the corruption under no IB RAW scanner.
There will be more leaks of sophisticated infos. The current structure is much better, only answerable to the PM and cabinet. or else these agencies would be helpless.
 
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Politicians are corrupt everywhere.

American politicians are no messiahs.

Besides, if you can't even expect these politicians to take proper care of the intelligence agencies, how the hell can you possible expect them to take care of the entire country.

The very reasoning you offer defies logic.

so that they take proper care of the country we have a 'Danda' which are these agencies. If these agencies become answerable to some idiot MLA it'S blunder!!!
 
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so that they take proper care of the country we have a 'Danda' which are these agencies. If these agencies become answerable to some idiot MLA it'S blunder!!!

The 'danda' is anyways still only answerable to the ruling party.

At least parliament will ensure that no single party will use the agencies for witch hunting.
 
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Its said that IB snoops on everyone ranging from ministers to judges to armed forces chiefs. There was a recent scandal in which bugs were found inside Finance Ministry and Pranab Mukherjee said that he knows who is behind this (who else other than Home Ministry).
 
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MLA should watch out for LALU....RAW has clearly stated that an atttack on LALU YADAV would be deemed as an attack on Amitab and since Arjun is not yet in service they will have to bring in the IPL sponsors to pay for the private security of Congress and BSF......One we can have a private security guard armed with a revolver for every BSF officer then we look at our internal affairs with a much different perspective and threats from within can eliminated with firing a single shot from Tejas.:tup:

Sorry I dont get that.
 
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There are both advantages and disadvantages to do this moves :
The biggest advantage will be that the ruling party cannot misuse the intelligence agencies for their benefits. And if some resources are not provided to Intelligence agencies opposition can force the ruling party to provide the agencies with what they want.

The biggest disadvantage is that civilian leadership is not always understandable of what these people do on the ground and this will hinder their operational capabilities sometimes not to mention many politicians loves to talk which these agencies cannot afford. Many of the times these agencies might not be allowed to carry out an operational or might even be asked to leave an operation in between.

I think if we are following US ways then we should really follow there way. There is a intelligence over-site committee of the Senate in US. This committe comprises of some selected members from the senate and they can be from any party not just from ruling one. We should also adapt this method. Instead of revealing secrets to every idiot sitting in the Parliament ( as not everyone can handle these truths ) we should select some capable politicians from almost every big political party and form a committee to which these agencies are answerable.
 
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angel's got it right, a few select leaders under oaths of secrecy is fine but itll be best to keep the head of raw and ib offa the parliament floor just so that some crooked rapist thieves from eastern up or bihar can call him stupid.
 
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