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India's Need for Tahrir Square

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In 2011 multiple corruption scandals implicated senior officials and cabinet ministers in India, involving sums of public money thought to be equivalent to almost one-quarter of India's GDP, and casting doubt on the public policy formation in sectors crucial to India's economic growth -- such as infrastructure and telecommunications. India's rapidly growing middle class emerged from its comfort zone to express outrage at this brazen public looting. Led by the Anna Hazare, a respected Gandhian social reformer, a national campaign by a group of social activists to establish a new and powerful anti-corruption body -- the Lok Pal -- has been underway for the past year.

In spite of the momentum created by the public display of anger, the proposed Lok Pal bill failed to become law in the winter session of parliament. Throughout the past year, there were fierce exchanges of accusations between the ruling Congress party and the main opposition (the BJP), and there remain very strong schisms among the country's influential and voluble civil society on whether or not any proposed new ombudsman is a sensible way to tackle corruption. For every Medha Patkar supporting Anna, there is an Arundhati Roy opposing him vociferously. To add to the confusion, there are at least two versions of the Lok Pal bill: the one introduced in Parliament by the government is universally considered weak and at best a half-measure, while the bill proposed by Anna and his associates raises serious practical issues, such as whether it is a good idea to create yet another powerful and ultimately autocratic body which may be accountable to no one.

Both sides have done a good job at alienating some of their supporters, as well as their opponents. For its part, the government ensured that the bill would be defeated as a result of its political machinations and predictable bureaucratic inefficiency. On the other side, Anna and his advisors also appear to have undermined their own movement by speaking too much, seemingly on every issue under the sun, and with rather intemperate and unbending rhetoric. Unless there is course correction, Anna Hazare risks being projected by the government as a crackpot rather than a messiah.

All this rush, rhetorical jousting and legislative gamesmanship has made the issue more befuddled and complicated to follow, perhaps providing the political class with a means of escaping from the dragnet. If this is India 's "Arab spring" then it is also uniquely Indian, in that there are circles within circles, hundreds of self-styled leaders who claim to be speaking on behalf of "the people", and a million mutinies instead of a single Tahrir Square. It is current proof -- as if any were needed -- that the Indian political process is at times its own worst enemy, and that entrenched self-interest combined with governing ineptitude ends up ruling the day -- even when the objective and purpose are so clearly defined and justifiable.

Despite these complications, the significance of Anna Hazare's campaign cannot be minimized, and should by all rights serve as the model for galvanizing public support in India and throughout the world. He has brought the issue of corruption into mainstream Indian political debate for the first time in more than a generation, and has succeeded in mobilizing India's urban middle class -- no small task. Unlike earlier major protest movements in the country, such as over caste-based job reservations or economic reforms, the issue of corruption has actually united rather than dividing different ideological, class, caste and demographic groups. At a very fundamental level, the roots of urban middle class anger are the same as the despair of Indian villagers that have led to the Maoist insurgency: terrible governance, stifling corruption, tremendous economic disparity and the total absence of any kind of urgency by the political class.

Official apathy has reached such alarming levels that more public money is spent on salaries or pensions of government employees, or on ministerial perks such as free houses and cars with flashy beacons, than on public health in India. In fact, it would be hard to find another democracy anywhere else in the world where bureaucrats -- an unelected, unrepresentative and essentially unanswerable elite -- have amassed so much power, privileges and entrenched immortality while hiding under the banner of 'governance.'

All of this inflames the Anna Hazare movement and makes it such a potent threat to the political establishment. The issue of corruption and governance is now likely to become the most animated political pivot in the near term, especially with five states in India scheduled for elections in the next two months. By taking the Gandhi family head-on and by name, and by associating corruption primarily with the Congress party, Anna has raised the stakes spectacularly for Congress, especially in Uttar Pradesh (UP), the country's most populous and politically important state. It is ironic that heir apparent to the Gandhi dynasty -- Rahul Gandhi -- has staked his own political fortunes on a state where the stakes are so high, and which might, if early reports from the ground are accurate, yet prove to be his Waterloo.

For some years now, there has been over-anticipation in the media and even worship within the Congress party of the notion of Rahul Gandhi's accession to the highest levels of power. A good result in the UP state elections, where he has been campaigning intensely for many months, was considered by most analysts as the appropriate starting point for his eventual elevation as the future prime minister of the country. In the current environment, a "good result" has now become that much more crucial for the Congress party, because anything less will be interpreted as a loss of face for the Gandhi family. The Anna factor has thrown a wrench into the carefully scripted Sonia/Rahul succession plan.

Should the Congress do poorly in UP, greater political and economic instability may await the country. The Congress is intrinsically populist by habit. Despite having some top economic brains and reformers in its fold, the Singh government has dispensed massive subsidies, loan waivers and other unsustainable sops over the last few years. India's overall fiscal deficit has increased to nearly 12 percent, an increase of 50 percent since 2004 when the Congress took over, and further subsidies enshrined in a proposed food security bill, a pet project of the Gandhis, now threaten to raise this much higher. Everyone knows that subsidies are profligate and unsustainable, but in the face of a poor result in the forthcoming state elections, sensible voices in the Congress will most likely be overruled.

More broadly, the strange twists and turns of this anti-corruption campaign have allowed for a closer inspection of India's fabled democracy, and it is not the pretty picture Indians usually acclaim. Yes, India votes often, does vote in large numbers, and its poor do indeed vote the most. But India also has a habit of kicking out incumbent governments. All this should and does make Indians proud, especially given the neighborhood of failing or autocratic states in which India finds itself. On the other hand, there is also an absence of civilized debate and compromise in the Indian public sphere, with the focus instead being on how to outmaneuver each other. Of late, many elements of Indian media and civil society appear to have been co-opted into the power elite, and a recent scandal -- still unsolved -- involving an influential corporate lobbyist and many senior journalists has led to disturbing questions being raised about how independent the Indian media truly is.

In the end, Indian democracy remains mired in personality cult, secretive deal-making and cheap demagoguery. An American analyst once said that Indian democracy appears to represent the people without adequately serving them. A strong anti-corruption watchdog, whether as proposed by Anna or as conceived by others, may yet change some of that. The anti-corruption platform is a very good start toward re-fashioning Indian democracy and governance, but ultimately Indians will need to demand more fundamental political change in the country, especially in the social contract between them and their elected leaders. If that were to happen, then this time may yet be remembered as India's own spring. If it fails to happen, then it really will take a Tahrir Square to shake up the establishment and deliver meaningful change to the Indian people.

Subhash Agrawal: India's Need for Tahrir Square

Its time for the slumdogs, slum dwellers and bollywood daydreamers to stand up against their corrupt politicians and ultra rich businessmen who are making billions of dollars from corruption out of weapons procurement from the US war criminals and war mongerers and Israel.
 
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^ we are doing our best to fight with corruption...

No need to drag weapons & US, Israel in it... they are affecting foreign diplomacy only..

& about your good advice with bitter words... look @ your self,dream boy... you are not living in heaven..:no:
 
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^ we are doing our best to fight with corruption...

No need to drag weapons & US, Israel in it... they are affecting foreign diplomacy only..

& about your good advice with bitter words... look @ your self,dream boy... you are not living in heaven..:no:

Nice- so that voids every thing the article is saying- jai hind- :D-
 
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Nice- so that makes india perfect- no problems at all- :D-

you just ignore my prior part & highlighted to your interest....

article is about corruption in Indian politics, where the hell did US, Israel & weapons come in that ?

I replied to OPs quote ... dont get hyper
 
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Nice- so that voids every thing the article is saying- jai hind- :D-
Of course, we are not perfect. But what we do is resolve our own issues in a democratic way (protests, in case the word is unheard of in Pure-Land). We fortunately do not have a civil-military tussle, nor a state within a state, nor do we have the Supreme Court denigrating our Prime Minister as dishonest, nor do we have our ambassadors in a house-arrest cowering with fear over being bumped off. So yes, we are moving to strengthen our democracy while the wheels move very slowly, they do move. I hope you can find solace in your constitution and democracy, while we try to improve ours.
 
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you just ignore my prior part & highlighted to your interest....

article is about corruption in Indian politics, where the hell did US, Israel & weapons come in that ?

I replied to OPs quote ... dont get hyper

US-Israel and weapons are part of corruption-
Maybe you are not familiar with the defence deal monetary scandals of your country- :coffee:-
btw- i am born hyper- dont get worried-
 
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US-Israel and weapons are part of corruption-
Maybe you are not familiar with the defence deal monetary scandals of your country- :coffee:-
btw- i am born hyper- dont get worried-

India`s getting weapons from Russia more then US... so why US in first place?
& you think weapons are only reason of corruption?

Aur hyper hoo to road pe nacho yahan par to sensible hi rah jao..:lol:
 
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Of course, we are not perfect. But what we do is resolve our own issues in a democratic way (protests, in case the word is unheard of in Pure-Land). We fortunately do not have a civil-military tussle, nor a state within a state, nor do we have the Supreme Court denigrating our Prime Minister as dishonest, nor do we have our ambassadors in a house-arrest cowering with fear over being bumped off. So yes, we are moving to strengthen our democracy while the wheels move very slowly, they do move. I hope you can find solace in your constitution and democracy, while we try to improve ours.

Go through a little bit of past history and you'll know how much we protest- :lol:-
Restoration of power to supreme courts- restoration of democracy- the constitution- the layers- heck we even protest for load shedding-
All the other complaints you mentioned all are part and parcel of a democratic system-
Which democracy doesn't allow supreme court to declare prime minister dishonest?-
in which democracy a former ambassador cannot be house arrested for alleged charge of treason?-
Let me ask you this- you know what you are talking about right?-
 
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India`s getting weapons from Russia more then US... so why US in first place?

why should it matter to me- did i say anything about you getting more weapon from either US ir Russia?-

& you think weapons are only reason of corruption?
No i dont think so- nor i hv implied that some where-

Aur hyper hoo to road pe nacho yahan par to sensible hi rah jao..:lol:
paisay layk private villa per nachnay say to acha hai k mein road per hi nachlon:taz:-
 
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Go through a little bit of past history and you'll know how much we protest- :lol:-
Restoration of power to supreme courts- restoration of democracy- the constitution- the layers- heck we even protest for load shedding-
All the other complaints you mentioned all are part and parcel of a democratic system-
Which democracy doesn't allow supreme court to declare prime minister dishonest?-
in which democracy a former ambassador cannot be house arrested for alleged charge of treason?-
Let me ask you this- you know what you are talking about right?-
I guess u wanted to say lawyers. Secondly, Can you show me 1 link which says Haqqani is to be put under house arrest because of an alleged charge ? As for other statement, which part of democracy allows a state within a state ? Which part of democracy involves your military to cause friction with your civilian authority ? Of course, i know what i am talking about ? But do you believe in what you are talking about ?
 
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india needs a tahrir square ?? lmao....that is one retarded ****..all we need are elections for booting the congress out....rest is fine

Its time for the slumdogs, slum dwellers and bollywood daydreamers to stand up against their corrupt politicians and ultra rich businessmen who are making billions of dollars from corruption out of weapons procurement from the US war criminals and war mongerers and Israel.

slaves need to stand up to the masters and demand their basic rights...the most basic one being procreating without getting killed...lol..
 
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you just ignore my prior part & highlighted to your interest....

article is about corruption in Indian politics, where the hell did US, Israel & weapons come in that ?

I replied to OPs quote ... dont get hyper

Dude either you are an ignorant or simply a bollywooddaydreamer yourself. Indian corruption comes mainly from weapons procurement. I will not expand given that its useless to explain, better for you to continue dreaming.
 
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Dude either you are an ignorant or simply a bollywooddaydreamer yourself. Indian corruption comes mainly from weapons procurement. I will not expand given that its useless to explain, better for you to continue dreaming.

you know more then Indian financial advisers??? spend on defence is only 2% of Indian gdp & it is only reason of Indian poverty in your view... now say who is wet dreamer here?

adding a flag of China in your profile also increase your IQ?:rofl:
 
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you know more then Indian financial advisers??? spend on defence is only 2% of Indian gdp & it is only reason of Indian poverty in your view... now say who is wet dreamer here?

adding a flag of China in your profile also increase your IQ?:rofl:

also a dose of self-confidence...lol this bacha is in lahore and he is hiding behind the chinese flag to post threads on india...such pathetic inferiority complex....:tdown:
 
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also a dose of self-confidence...lol this bacha is in lahore and he is hiding behind the chinese flag to post threads on india...such pathetic inferiority complex....
That has become the recent trend for these guys......
Lol on topic I think the heading needs a small change over with the country.
 
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