Write a letter to
the Chief Election Commissioner, expressing your views on the disqualification
of party candidates exempted from fighting elections. Express your views on the
moral code of the candidates. How criminals or other offenders can be kept out
of the pulling fray. What should be done to amend the laws on this by the
parliament? (Your letter will belong to which category of communication)
Reference:
Reference:
Answer:
Date: 06.06.2010
Date: 06.06.2010
To,
The Chief
Election Commissioner,
Hyderabad.
Sir,
Subject: Views on
Disqualification of a Party Candidate’s, Violation of moral code of candidates and
Criminalization
in Politics
After 60 years of India’s
independence the lives of commoners is far worse than under Britishers. The
benefits of independence have reached only few, thus creating islands of few
ultra rich people surrounded by vast sea of utterly poor. The rich people in
nexus with those in power are getting favourable laws enacted to suit their
ends. Those in power are shamelessly enjoying 5-star luxuries all at tax
payer’s expense, while more than 50 million are starving to death. The
criminalization of politics, executive & judiciary is almost complete. The
corruption has spread its tentacles far & wide, there is corruption from
womb to tomb, from maternity hospital to grave yard. The injustices mated out,
the atrocities perpetrated by public servants are worse than Britishers. The
biggest confounding factor in the political environment of business is
criminalization of politics: people with criminal backgrounds becoming
politicians and elected representatives. Around 20% of the members of the
current Lok Sabha have criminal cases pending against them. The charges in
several of these cases are of heinous crimes such as murder, robbery,
kidnapping, and not just violation of Section 144, or something similar.
It is well known that all parties take the
help of criminal elements to dominate the election scene in India. But this
process is influencing the mind and the will of the people both to gain the
majority to rule the country according to their will. The system of democracy
is now changing into the dictatorship of some. Because the democracy of India
are now in hands of the criminal who are not capable any way to hold the post
if legislature.
The politicians are thriving today on the basis of muscle power provided by criminals. The common people who constitute the voters are in most cases too reluctant to take measures that would curtail the criminal activities. Once the political aspect joins the criminal elements the nexus becomes extremely dangerous. Many of politicians chose muscle power to gain vote bank in the country, and they apply the assumption that, if we are unable to bring faith in the community then we can generate fear or threat to get the power in the form of election.
The elections to Parliament and State Legislatures are very expensive and it is a widely accepted fact that huge election expenditure is the root cause for corruption in India. A candidate has to spend lakhs of rupees to get elected and even if he gets elected, the total salary he gets during his tenure as an MP/MLA will be meagre compared to his election expenses. How can he bridge the gap between the income and expenses? Publicly through donations and secretly through illegal means. The expenditure estimation for an election estimated as Rs 5 per voter as election expenditure, for 600 million voters, and calculation of all the expenses in a general elaction estimated around Rs 2,000 crore. Then there is the period between elections. This requires around Rs 250 crore. Then there are state elections and local elections. All told, the system has to generate around Rs 5,000 crore in a five year cycle or Rs 1,000 crore on average each year. Where is this money to come from? Only criminal activity can generate such large sums of untaxed funds. That is why we have criminals in politics. They have money and muscle, so they win and help others in their party win as well.
The political parties and independent candidates have astronomical expenditure for vote buying and other illegitimate purposes through these criminals or so called goondas. A politician’s link with them constituency provides a congenial climate to political crime. Those who do not know why they ought to vote comprise the majority of voters of this country. Therefore majority of the voters are manoeuvrable, purchasable. Most of them are individually timid and collectively coward. To gain their support is easier for the unscrupulous than the conscientious.
We have long witnessed criminals being wooed by political parties
and given cabinet posts because their muscle and money power fetches crucial
votes. Elections are won and lost on swings of just 1% of the vote, so parties
cynically woo every possible vote bank, including those headed by accused
robbers and murderers. Legal delays ensure that the accused will die of old age
before being convicted, so parties virtuously insist that these chaps must be
regarded as innocent till proved guilty.
In every election all parties without exception put up candidates with a criminal background. Even though some of us whine about the decision taken by the parties, the general trend is that these candidates are elected to office. By acting in such a manner we fail to realize that the greatest power that democracy arms the people is to vote incompetent people out of power.
Independence has taken place through a two-stage process. The
first stage was the corrupting of the institutions and the second stage was the
institutionalization of corruption. As we look at the corruption scene today,
we find that we have reached this stage because the corrupting of the institutions
in turn has finally led to the institutionalization of corruption. The failure
to deal with corruption has bred contempt for the law. When there is contempt
for the law and this is combined with the criminalization of politics,
corruption flourishes. India is ranked 66 out of 85 in the Corruption
Perception Index 1998 by the German non-government organization Transparency
International based in Berlin. This means that 65 countries were perceived to
be less corrupt than India and 19 were perceived to be more corrupt.
The Election Commission must take adequate measures to break the nexus between the criminals and the politicians. The forms prescribed by the Election Commission for candidates disclosing their convictions, cases pending in courts and so on in their nomination papers is a step in the right direction if it applied properly. Too much should not be expected, however, from these disclosures. They would only inform people of the candidate’s history and qualifications, but not prohibit them from casting their votes, regardless, in favour of a criminal.
For the past several general elections there has existed a gulf
between the Election Commission and the voter. Common people hardly come to
know the rules made by the commission. Bridging this gap is essential not only
for rooting out undesirable elements from politics but also for the survival of
our democratic polity. This is an incremental process, the rate of success of
which is directly proportional to the increase in literacy rate in India. The
electorate have made certain wrong choices in the past, but in the future
national interest should guide them in making intelligent choices.
Criminalization is a fact of Indian
electoral politics today. The voters, political parties and the law and order
machinery of the state are all equally responsible for this. There is very
little faith in India in the efficacy of the democratic process in actually
delivering good governance. This extends to accepting criminalization of politics
as a fact of life. Toothless laws against convicted criminals standing for
elections further encourage this process. Under current law, only people who
have been convicted at least on two counts be debarred from becoming
candidates. This leaves the field open for charge sheeted criminals, many of
whom are habitual offenders or history-shelters. It is mystifying indeed why a
person should be convicted on two counts to be disqualified from fighting
elections. The real problem lies in the definitions. Thus, unless a person has
been convicted, he is not a criminal. Mere charge-sheets and pending cases do
not suffice as bars to being nominated to fight an election. So the law has to
be changed accordingly.
The
Supreme Court judgment of May 2, 2002 mandated that candidates disclose their
criminal antecedents, if any, as also their financial and educational
background. The Election Commission had proposed amendment of statutory rules
and the format of nomination papers, to give effect to this judgment of the
Supreme Court. The Apex Court judgement to check corruption among public
servant is a welcome step. No law should provide protective shield to the
corrupt public official and the court has rightly held that no prior sanction of
competent authority would be required to prosecute them. With this order, 93
MPs and 10 ministers in Manmohan Singh's ministry are under the scanner on
various criminal charges. This is appalling. It is ironical that the executive
and legislatures who make and implement policies and guidelines for the
development are themselves acting as stumbling block in the development of the
nation. The role of Supreme Court becomes very important here. The Apex Court
as custodian of constitution should take all necessary steps to strengthen
democracy in the country.
The
legislature and executive have been complaining about the Supreme Court’s
intervention on their domain, but it becomes imperative in such kind of
unwanted situation. The Supreme Court of India upheld a PIL which made it
mandatory for everyone seeking public office to disclose their criminal,
financial and educational history. It was a way to ensure that the voters knew
the important details about their “honourable” leaders, and steamed them were
indeed.
Some of the parties would be able to draw
advantage from the Supreme Court order because they have had less opportunity
to indulge in crime and corruption. They would have a greater chance of
watching candidates of other parties squirm and suffer in agony. Some others
might be happy because they already have efficient watchdog systems and
batteries of lawyers in place that would permit them to file counter-affidavits
and challenge nominations of opposing candidates within hours of their being
filed.
The Right to Information Act 2005 is a historical Act that makes Government officials liable for punishment if they fail to respond to people within a stipulated timeframe. Many public servants are leading luxurious lifestyles, beyond the legal sources of their income. Many public servants are filing false affidavits about their annual income, wealth details to Election Commission of India / Vigilance Commission / other authorities, as the case may be. These authorities are not properly verifying these affidavits.
Many scams, scandals are coming to light
day in & day out, politicians are accusing each other of involvement in
scams. Whereas, the said authorities are keeping mum, as if those affidavits
filed by tainted public servants are true. The tainted public servants are not
even providing full, right information to public as per RTI Act, lest the truth
come out. This seen is very normal now a day that some public servants, caught
red-handed during luxurious spending, they easily say that it is at their
political party’s expense or their well wisher’s expense.
Besides the actual utterances, the
impassioned manner in which these are delivered would appear to incite a
riotous behaviour which is not conducive to an atmosphere of peace and harmony
in which the Election Commission is committed to conduct free and fair
elections in the conducive.
I shall be grateful if the Election Commission would urgently look into this and issue a show some measures.
Thanking
you,
Yours truly,
XYZ
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