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Criminals and the rich thrive in Indian democracy

With every election, democracy is undoubtedly deepening in India. But it is also exposing the systems limitations. True, the frequency of polls is at regular intervals. It is also true that the voters are free to exercise their ballot and walk up to the polling booths on their own and on their free will. Yet, it is equally true that elections have been reduced to an exercise to grab power -- the power which has itself become an end by itself, not an opportunity to serve or perform. Three traits are recognizable: criminals, money bags and defeat of women candidates.

Take the example of the three states, Maharashtra, Haryana and Arunachal Pradesh, which went to polls recently. Criminals have captured 50 per cent seats in Maharashtra. There are regular charges under Indian Penal Code against them. Out of these, 15 percent have been booked for murder and 22 per cent for dacoity and kidnapping and six for extortion. The states record is better than before. In the 2004 assembly election, the number of criminal candidates was 123. This time they are 143.

Haryana, next door to Delhi, has elected 17 percent of criminals. Haryana has slipped in the sense that in the last election there were as many as 28 members with a criminal history. This time their number has gone down to 17. Arunachal Pradesh has made no progress. It has maintained the figure of five percent like the last time.

Also, money is becoming crucial in every poll. There is no doubting about the relationship between the assets of a candidate and the victory. The analysis of assets declared by candidates -- a statutory requirement -- showed that if a candidate possessed more than Rs 1 crore, his or her chance of success straightway went up by 50 percent in all the three states. In Haryana an affluent candidate was best placed with 72 percent chances of success. In Maharashtra the success was 68 percent and in Arunachal Pradesh 58 percent.

And it was distressing to see fewer and fewer women winning the election. The government's efforts to reserve 33 percent of seats in parliament and the state assemblies become all the more necessary to offset their poor representation. In all the three states, women have done badly. The percentage of the success is 3.82 percent in Maharashtra, the most advanced, five percent in Arunachal and almost twice the average, 8.89 per cent, in the otherwise backward Haryana.

A new thing which has, however, emerged is the proliferation of family members. Earlier, this was confined to the Indira Gandhi's dynasty — she nominating her son Rajiv Gandhi, and Sonia Gandhi, positioning her son, Rahul Gandhi, in the Congress party she heads. But this assembly election has seen chief ministers, party chiefs and those highly placed in the Congress or the BJP nominating their sons, nephews, daughters and daughters-in-law. Most of them have won. The most reprehensible part is that the son of India's President has returned on the Congress ticket. The President is a figurehead in our constitution and she becomes crucial when the alliances break. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh leads a coalition which has inherent weaknesses.

In India, elections have been reduced to an exercise to grab power

What is most disturbing is that the ideology has more or less disappeared. The name of the Congress or that of the BJP was there but candidates seldom mentioned or projected the party's ideology.

Combinations and alliances on the basis of sub-castes and regional bias have come to the fore. With no ideology and a surfeit of loyal relatives, political parties are rapidly taking the shape of a private limited company which distributes shares to its dear ones. Both concentrate on the strategy to succeed by hook or by crook.

What gave the Congress and the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) the edge in Maharashtra -- they won 188 seats out of 288 -- was the alliance and the fallout of the fight between the two Marathi chauvinists, Bal Thackery's Shiv Sena and the breakaway Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) led by his nephew, Raj Thackery. The division of votes -- MNS secured six per cent -- also affected the fortunes of the BJP. The MNS also helped the Congress-NCP alliance which had also announced the installation of Rs 250-crore Shivaji statue on the Mumbai seafront.

Again, in Haryana, Om Prakash Chautala, who did not win even half a dozen assembly seats in the last election, emerged as the Jat leader by projecting the community's pride. In the house of 90, the Congress secured only 40. And what the party did to form the government is itself a shameful story.

Seven independent MLA's were picked up by the police overnight. All have been promised ministerships or equivalent positions with the same status and emoluments. And it was not a surprise that the session was convened for one day to administer oaths to 90 MLAs, to elect the speaker and deputy speaker, to have the governor's address, discussion on it and vote of thanks before adjournment.

The state government should have intervened to stop the horse trading. But how could the chief minister have such gumption when he owes his appointment to the Congress-ruled centre? The civil society does not speak out because it has more or less accepted that politics cannot be cleansed. Then why blame the extreme communists, the Naxalites, who have taken to the gun because of their loss of faith in the ballot box?

The sham of democracy was underlined by the one-line resolution passed by elected members: Congress president Sonia Gandhi is authorised to nominate the leader. She named Ashok Chavan to head Maharashtra and Bhupinder Hooda to lead Haryana. The electorate returned members, not Sonia Gandhi. But this has become a practice. The Congress is no exception. All political parties, more or less, adopt the same procedure. BJPs Vasundra Raje Scindia, former Rajasthan Chief Minister, had to quit the leadership although she commanded the support of the majority of MLAs. The BJP high command or the party mentor, RSS, punished her for the defeat in the Assembly election. If democracy is to prevail, the MLAs, who faced the voters, should have decided her fate.

It is always easy to hang all your problems on one peg. It makes you forget even the call of conscience. The high command would decide. But then it leads to autocracy. At least, the Congress should have learnt the lesson when it was in the wilderness. But then power is such a heady wine that it makes parties forget to differentiate between wrong and right, moral and immoral. The leader knows best.

(The writer is a veteran Indian journalists and diplomat. He was also one-time member of the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Indian parliament)

 
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