Sunday, January 30, 2011
This degeneration cuts across parties and fronts; and so all the culprits escape
Chief Minister V.S.Achuthanandan has spoken about degeneration in politics and democracy in Kerala. No doubt about it, but almost all of the culprits escape b y hooks or crooks.
Criminals engage in their activities, drawing in worthies from all political persuasions and connections. When all are involved, no one can be arraigned, at least in the final reckoning. Pressures would mount from all quarters to save real culprits.
When political leaders or other worthy individuals are involved in sex orgies, criminals involved would take advantage of them, no doubt.
When big leaders are involved, they would easily win over all the powers-that-be and get ways to wriggle out of the situation one way or other.
Just think about the dirty linen being washed in public in the ice cream parlour case. Now Justices Narayana Kurup and Thankappan have been drawn into the issue as having supported matters in favour of Kunjalikutty!!! There is no direct evidence, only a third party conversation drawing both the justices in the issue. And the conversationalist is an accused in Vithura sex scam!!!
Ajitha, K.R.Gowri Amma, Meenakshi Thampan, all outright activists for women’s rights, if not human rights, have been approached by various people for coercing them to take interested stance, according to reports.
At least there have been media reports about the alleged involvement of T.P.Dasan and P.Sasi, Marxist leaders. These may be false reports, but these have crept into the minds of the people.
Criminals have succeeded in enjoining a lot of worthies so that no cogent action would be possible in the final round. There would be some namesake investigations that would finally fizzle out. The criminals have succeeded.
Still, I would say Kerala mediascape should not be fully immersed in this washing of dirty linen, to the exclusion of other key issues that are very important to the common people. Now the media are concentrating on ice cream parlour and related aspects only.
Saturday, January 29, 2011
People do not live by reportage of sex scams alone!!!
The revelations by Rauf, the co-brother of Muslim League leader P.K.Kunjalikutty, as rightly pointed out by Congress leader Oommen Chandy, do not offer any new angle to the sex scandal and related issues.
During the heydays of the ice cream parlour case that ran roughshod for decades media were flush with reports about the coterie that was doing everything to enable Kunjalikutty to come out of the case unscathed. Rauf’s name was also in media circles then and always.
For receiving such help, there would be a heavy price to be paid by such people. Kunjalikutty has learnt this lesson, it seems.
Kunjalikutty’s press conference was actually aimed at people who would be deftly influenced by Rauf and his team for their wrong-doings and manipulation, that he had no role and no responsibility for these deeds. In fact, that is a good gesture so that gullible people can be warned.
Sex scandals have a peculiarity, these do not fade out, however hard the actors try to suppress issues.
Those who were involved or allegedly involved in sex scandals in Kerala have had a hell of a time coming out of the vice-grip of the trauma associated with it. A wag had observed such people would go on devising schemes which ultimately would ruin their brains, causing a burst of the priceless intellectual property.
In a politically overcharged state like Kerala, the affairs of Kunjalikutty now the cynosure of further controversy, would permeate the very air and go on exploding. Only thing is that it should not overshadow the real and pressing issues of the people.
People’s lives need proper attention and governance, sex scams should not be the staple feed for them. Men and women would do anything for quick gains and pleasure. Not all people are like that and they should be provided safety, security and provisions.
Friday, January 28, 2011
If a political leader like Kunjalikutty fears for his life, what about common people?
Indian Union Muslim League’s general secretary, second in line in the IUML hierarchy, says his life is in danger from quotation gangs retained by his own co-brother, we should heave a deep breath and ask how did all these things happen and what are the circumstances.
No one should be harmed by blackmailing and attacks from goons, let alone a senior leader like Kunjalikutty. Some political rivals are attaching imputations to Kunjalikutty’s revelations as a measure to preclude further damage on account of some impending findings.
Whatever it is, people are concerned that a shadow is hanging over them with regard to safety and security. People should not be left to draw conclusions on their own, instead there should be proper investigation about the threat perspective and about darker elements lurking behind the camouflage of certain interests.
Kunjalikutty says he had worked in the past to benefit his co-brother who has turned inimical for some time now.
When private forces take control of affairs which should have been the domain of state forces, it is only natural that there would be boomerangs.
The general public needs the support of state forces which should be just and fair and considerate.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
India has grown, developed and poised to soar up and up, but neethi and nyaya should also be provided to all
India is celebrating its 52nd Republic Day with various achievements and accomplishments denoting phenomenal growth in multiple spheres. We must be proud of the existence of the nation as one guarded entity amidst a multiplicity of diversities.
Around the time India achieved Independence, many other nations also got the same, but a lot of them have gone berserk with military rule or totalitarian regimes or namesake democracies.
But we have gone on drafting a glorious Constitution and adopted it to become a Republic in 1950.There were a lot of leaders who contributed to shaping up the Republic.
Some politicians may have gone on becoming selfish and corrupt, but that does not mean that the whole country is supporting them. The people at large want a corruption-free governance, but the regime is under the control of the mighty, always. And there should be efforts to cleanse the system from within. We cannot break the system and create chaos, for which the fight should be from within.
There are a lot of people the world over who would do anything for ensuring transparency. We do not know the intricacies of Julian Assange of WikiLeaks or the German bankman who are disclosing various secrets. Still the facts they present to the world attract a lot of attention, meaning the people everywhere want clean governance.
The other day a youth, Utsav Sharma, attacked Rajesh Talwar, father of Aarushi, on court premises. It was the same youth who had attacked SPS Rathore who was indicted in the Ruchika molestation case. From this it could be surmised that the youth believes that the system has failed in punishing certain culprits. His act is criminal, but suspicion would be created in the minds of the people about why punishment is eluding powerful people.
When the Republic grows older and stabilises further, rule of law should prevail in a better way. But the doubt is whether only the rich and powerful would get their sort of justice and the poor and the indigent are left to fend for themselves.
Definitely, there would be a higher form of justice which is divine would fall on those who bend worldly justice to their benefits.
I always have the inclination that those who dispense justice in this world in an indifferent way would be judged harshly by the Almighty. And teachers who deliberately trouble students, like giving marks lesser than what they deserve, would definitely get the curse of their wards and put to perdition.
The helpless who are taken advantage of by powerful people would suffer fire and brimstone in the bottomless pit, whatever be the Republic’s injustice to the lesser privileged. Those who enjoy and shout ha, ha over persecuting others and tormenting the just would meet with eternal damnation.
Friday, January 21, 2011
Irony of life: Indians stash ill-gotten money abroad, outsiders fleece Kerala through bogus lotteries
It is an irony of life in India; a lot of money is stashed abroad in various banks by individuals who could amass such filthy wealth using their position. America has got back part of its money thus lodged abroad, and it got penalty amount also. If India gets back all the money parked abroad by people who had got it by devious means, the country would at once become a world power, perhaps it can overtake China in money power. That is one aspect of it.
In Kerala High Court, it was argued on behalf of Santiago Martin of Megha Distributors by Manu Abhishek Singhvi of Congress Party, and later by others, that Kerala Government’s lottery ordinance disabling outside lotteries of devious distinction from operating from the State was interfering with the Constittuional powers of the Centre. Kerala Chief Minister V.S.Achuthanandan had sent a letter to the Prime Minister earlier that Rs 80,000 crore was amassed from the state by such lottery operators during the last four or five years.
And the court has accepted the arguments of the learned lawyers, for it can only discharge justice on the basis of the arguments adduced in its portals.
And now the ilk of Santiago Martin are singing the Constitutional usurpation of the country for fleecing the poor people of the State by running lotteries whose draw, details of payment of bumper and first prize winners, the venue of draw etc are kept in the dark!!!
There is no difference of opinion about this point with regard to Kerala’s Finance Minister Dr Thomas Isaac of the CPM and Congress Party’s spokesman Manu Abhishek Singhvi. They sail on the same boat with similar arguments.
The previous Oommen Chandy Government had banned lotteries of all sorts, in view of the monstrosity of the fraud going on here. But poor lottery vendors had taken up cudgels against the move and that was withdrawn.
Now it is up to the Centre and the State together to find a way out so that the poor people of the State would not be depleted of their hard-earned money.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Nothing done haphazardly, every Ministry move has political meaning
No doubt, considerable thought has gone into the tinkering done with the Dr Manmohan Singh Ministry, appeasing elements in Kerala to utmost extent.
Whatever may be the Opposition BJP harping against it, the Congress Party has a lot to do with regaining the reins in Kerala in the ensuing Assembly elections. Nothing should be left to chance elements snatching away a sure-shot State as far as the party is concerned. Reality check would confirm to it that a lot of under-currents are capable of fouling up the opportunity.
Nair Service Society does not outwardly appear to be particularly happy about K.C.Venugopal having been given a ministerial berth, all the same it is some relief for them. More measures like reservation for the economically backward among the forward communities, fetters in the education sector being removed etc would go a long way in humoring them.
Vayalar Ravi has been dreaming of becoming the Chief Minister of Kerala during his entire political stints everywhere. When the forces here have made a sort of arrangement with Ramesh Chennithala as KPCC President and Oommen Chandy as the natural choice for UDF’s Chief Ministership, Vayalar Ravi steamrolling as a candidate over others would vitiate the atmosphere. The high command has amply acknowledged his stature by providing him with the coveted portfolio of Civil Aviation, retaining his equally important folio of Overseas Indian Affairs. He has become a strongman in the Cabinet.
K.V.Thomas has also been given more powers of making decisions by giving him an independent portfolio of feeding the people, food and civil supplies and consumer affairs. Food security is a strong plank of the UPA II Government. And if Thomas can ensure food security, with all its inherent pitfalls, it would do him further good.
E.Ahamed was doing well as MoS External Affairs dealing with Gulf Arab and connected people and issues. He seemed to have liked the slot and so he got back the same. He could be happy, as well as his party, the Indian Union Muslim League of Kerala.
The Prime Minister has observed that there would be another expansion after the budget session of Parliament. Perhaps, before the next Assembly elections for Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Assam and Puducherry, some more appeasement acts would be extended covering Trinamool Congress in West Bengal, DMK in Tamil Nadu etc.
Tamil Nadu will have early elections as the term of its Assembly on May 16. The Kerala Assembly term ends on May 23. The Assam and Puducherry Assemblies have their terms till May 28.
The elections will be held for 234 seats in Tamil Nadu, 140 in Kerala, 294 in West Bengal, 126 in Assam and 30 in Puducherry.
Now West Bengal and Kerala are ruled by the Left parties, and Assam and Puducherry by the Congress. In Tamil Nadu, the DMK is in power with Congress support.
So, nothing has been haphazardly done in the present streamlining, every gesture has a political meaning.
No doubt, considerable thought has gone into the tinkering done with the Dr Manmohan Singh Ministry, appeasing elements in Kerala to utmost extent.
Whatever may be the Opposition BJP harping against it, the Congress Party has a lot to do with regaining the reins in Kerala in the ensuing Assembly elections. Nothing should be left to chance elements snatching away a sure-shot State as far as the party is concerned. Reality check would confirm to it that a lot of under-currents are capable of fouling up the opportunity.
Nair Service Society does not outwardly appear to be particularly happy about K.C.Venugopal having been given a ministerial berth, all the same it is some relief for them. More measures like reservation for the economically backward among the forward communities, fetters in the education sector being removed etc would go a long way in humoring them.
Vayalar Ravi has been dreaming of becoming the Chief Minister of Kerala during his entire political stints everywhere. When the forces here have made a sort of arrangement with Ramesh Chennithala as KPCC President and Oommen Chandy as the natural choice for UDF’s Chief Ministership, Vayalar Ravi steamrolling as a candidate over others would vitiate the atmosphere. The high command has amply acknowledged his stature by providing him with the coveted portfolio of Civil Aviation, retaining his equally important folio of Overseas Indian Affairs. He has become a strongman in the Cabinet.
K.V.Thomas has also been given more powers of making decisions by giving him an independent portfolio of feeding the people, food and civil supplies and consumer affairs. Food security is a strong plank of the UPA II Government. And if Thomas can ensure food security, with all its inherent pitfalls, it would do him further good.
E.Ahamed was doing well as MoS External Affairs dealing with Gulf Arab and connected people and issues. He seemed to have liked the slot and so he got back the same. He could be happy, as well as his party, the Indian Union Muslim League of Kerala.
The Prime Minister has observed that there would be another expansion after the budget session of Parliament. Perhaps, before the next Assembly elections for Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Assam and Puducherry, some more appeasement acts would be extended covering Trinamool Congress in West Bengal, DMK in Tamil Nadu etc.
Tamil Nadu will have early elections as the term of its Assembly on May 16. The Kerala Assembly term ends on May 23. The Assam and Puducherry Assemblies have their terms till May 28.
The elections will be held for 234 seats in Tamil Nadu, 140 in Kerala, 294 in West Bengal, 126 in Assam and 30 in Puducherry.
Now West Bengal and Kerala are ruled by the Left parties, and Assam and Puducherry by the Congress. In Tamil Nadu, the DMK is in power with Congress support.
So, nothing has been haphazardly done in the present streamlining, every gesture has a political meaning.
Where does the problem lie with regard to Sabarimala? Crowd accommodation absent, only control measures set in motion
As is their wont, the police department, the forest department and Travancore Devaswom Board have filed their reports to Kerala High Court regarding the Pullumedu tragedy in which 102 pilgrims were killed in stampede. No one could prevent the tragedy.
The police deparment justified its position, the forest department too did the same, however the devaswom board blamed both the departments and at the same time it washed its hands off any wrong-doing.
Did anyone commit any wrong-doing. No one willfully did anything, but the problem is the unwieldy crowds at places connected with Lord Ayyappa which are too congested and incapable of developing into facilities that can accommodate such gigantic crowds.
In future, this problem would further aggravate, unless entrance and exit facilities are enlarged on a substantial scale. Now what is being done is to control the crowds. Tigers and Elephants get better attention than the pilgrims in the place which is controlled by the forest department.
Without sanctioning a substantial extent of land now with the forest department, removing tigers and elephants from the area being sanctiond, and developing facilities to accommodate the surging crowds of pilgrims, there can be no way of preventing such tragedies. All other efforts would be just a tinkering process.
Now the court has asked the Travancore Devaswom Board whether the Makara Vilakku is man-made or celestially occurring. What is the difference between the Makara Vilakku and Makara Jyoti?
Now the court can ask the board to do a little bit of reality campaigning about the Makara Vilakku being a human-lit light. Most of the pilgrims from outside the State come here with the impression that the Makara Vilakku is celestial light. The board can take some simple measures by way of propagation that Makara Vilakku is man-made and not celestial. Only the board can do so, otherwise the exercise would be misinterpreted.
Some white light is coming out about need for exposure of money stashed abroad
Governance in all democratic countries would be trickier in view of information about exposure of corruption and black money stashed abroad coming out in different ways.
Military rulers, autocrats and the like need not be bothered about revelation for the time being since they have the country under their iron grip.
In countries like India, it may not be good going for the rulers for long as information about financial malfeasance is coming out in different ways.
If there is no WikiLeaks type leaks, there would be other types of revelations. Now a renegade banker has come out with some names of account holders abroad.
Lately, the Supreme Court has verbally criticized the government for not divulging the names of account holders abroad which have been accessed. The court has said it is plunder of the nation’s money. Stashing black money abroad cannot be the domain of any particular political party or individual. All people who get black money, corruption money, sleaze benefits deposit the same abroad.
Global Financial Integrity, an international group, has pointed out that Rs 20.85 lakh crore of Indian money is stashed abroad.
All the while, people have been enjoying the benefits of the secrecy laws surrounding the banking sector abroad. Now UN has passed a Convention on corruption and laws are being framed for repatriation of money from countries concerned.
It may not be soon that all these corrupt deals would be brought to light and money brought back. But a faint light is visible from whistle-blowers of sorts. Governance may not be that smooth without taking some form of action.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
He could donate money; but he chose to part with his kidney for the needy
Industrialist Kochouseph Chittilappally has shown the way forward in distributing the milk of human kindness by offering to donate one of his kidneys to a person whom he did not know earlier.
The is a sort of kidney exchange which offers to result in a kidney chain and it would not be a racket, if it becomes successful.
The recipient has to find a person within the family who will donate one kidney to another person and the link goes on like this.
The industrialist took inspiration from Fr Davis Chirammal of Thrissur who had donated a kidney to an outsider.
What our industrialists do by way of philanthropy could be nothing but donating some money to the needy. Our man’s deed is something akin to renunciation. His family members have concurred in with his intention, though reluctantly.
The industrialist also entertains some original thoughts regarding human conduct and life in this world. He had filed a petition before Kerala High Court seeking court’s sanction for individuals, on attaining certain age, to denounce medicines and surgery. The court has not given its opinion as yet.
There is a practice in the Jain community which is called Santhara or Sallenkhan, a procedure in which a Jain stops eating with the intention of preparing for death. This is different from suicide as it is not taken in passionate mood of anger, deceit or other emotions, but is undertaken only when the body is no longer capable of serving its owner as a instrument of spirituality and when inevitability of death is a matter of undisputed certainty.
The intention is to purify the body, and remove all thought of the physical things from the mind.
As well as giving up food and water, the ascetic abandons all desires and dislikes so that they can concentrate exclusively on the spiritual as they approach death.
Those who undergo Santhara are considered saints in the Jain community, although there is vehement criticism leveled against it by activists such as human rights protagonists. They say there is only right to life as enshrined in Article 21 of the Constitution and not right to death.
Remember Acharya Vinoba Bhave had died by fasting in 1982, not heeding to pleas by Indira Gandhi to change his decision.
Whatever the religious implications of higher order thinking, Kochouseph Chittilappally’s decision to donate the kidney and intention to join the kidney foundation activities is, indeed, laudable.
Industrialist Kochouseph Chittilappally has shown the way forward in distributing the milk of human kindness by offering to donate one of his kidneys to a person whom he did not know earlier.
The is a sort of kidney exchange which offers to result in a kidney chain and it would not be a racket, if it becomes successful.
The recipient has to find a person within the family who will donate one kidney to another person and the link goes on like this.
The industrialist took inspiration from Fr Davis Chirammal of Thrissur who had donated a kidney to an outsider.
What our industrialists do by way of philanthropy could be nothing but donating some money to the needy. Our man’s deed is something akin to renunciation. His family members have concurred in with his intention, though reluctantly.
The industrialist also entertains some original thoughts regarding human conduct and life in this world. He had filed a petition before Kerala High Court seeking court’s sanction for individuals, on attaining certain age, to denounce medicines and surgery. The court has not given its opinion as yet.
There is a practice in the Jain community which is called Santhara or Sallenkhan, a procedure in which a Jain stops eating with the intention of preparing for death. This is different from suicide as it is not taken in passionate mood of anger, deceit or other emotions, but is undertaken only when the body is no longer capable of serving its owner as a instrument of spirituality and when inevitability of death is a matter of undisputed certainty.
The intention is to purify the body, and remove all thought of the physical things from the mind.
As well as giving up food and water, the ascetic abandons all desires and dislikes so that they can concentrate exclusively on the spiritual as they approach death.
Those who undergo Santhara are considered saints in the Jain community, although there is vehement criticism leveled against it by activists such as human rights protagonists. They say there is only right to life as enshrined in Article 21 of the Constitution and not right to death.
Remember Acharya Vinoba Bhave had died by fasting in 1982, not heeding to pleas by Indira Gandhi to change his decision.
Whatever the religious implications of higher order thinking, Kochouseph Chittilappally’s decision to donate the kidney and intention to join the kidney foundation activities is, indeed, laudable.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Would be interesting to mull over V.S.Achuthanandan’s fate in his party
V.S.Achuthanandan is an interesting and probably intriguing leader of CPM who would not simply fade away from the party, definitely according to his body language.
He may not go the Nripen Chakravarty way in Tripura, who was expelled by the party. The gentleman comrade remained at that and lived for a 100 years. In between, the party had decided to re-admit him also, for sure he would not be a threat to anyone at that age.
The party set-up in Kerala could be vastly different from the entity in many other states. Caste, creed, forward or backward and other considerations weigh high on a leader remaining relevant upstairs.
That way also Achuthanandan cannot be ignored, for he has his own areas of influence. And he knows that very well.
His completion of the normal tenure of chief ministership itself, in spite of strong opposition to him in many ways within the party, is itself proof that he cannot be vanquished easily.
The latest is that Politburo member S.Ramachandran Pillai has announced that the politburo had not discussed the issue of reprimanding V.S.Achuthanandan for his not consulting the party before requesting the Central Government to order a CBI probe into the lotteries muddle.
Media reports are wrong, according to him. Naturally, the party would have got feedback that anymore action against Achuthanandan could be counter-productive. Achuthanandan may have his own trump cards.
What would be the fate of Achuthanandan in his own party in the near future? Would he remain a mute witness to the goings-on against him? These are all moot questions that would generate interest in the minds of party observers.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
You go on increasing administrative prices and withdrawing subsidies; that is the easiest way of bridging gap, but that is not expertise
Once an Englishman, who happened to be in a Press Club for some function, an academic, commented to me about the magnetic effect of liberalization process going on in India during the P V Narasimha Rao regime. The gentleman was commenting about the administration’s success in bridging budget deficit so nicely.
True to my self, I bluntly asked him a question: “Is there any difficulty in bridging the deficit by going on increasing the administrative prices of commodities and at the same time withdrawing subsidies”. The gentleman was dumbfounded.
I was not expressing any ideological hiatus, for my ideology, if it is one, is co-existence of quick and efficient growth, at the same time taking care of ordinary people, whose income is much less.
I always say Indian capitalist system that has been wafted in has not cared to introduce the welfare measures introduced in copy-book capitalist countries.
No doubt, they are now finding it difficult to distribute the largesse of welfare measures as in the past. And there is considerable resentment in those countries. We have not even introduced the same and we are boisterous about the success.
What I mean to say is: Not much of economic expertise, least of all the wisdom of Dr Manmohan Singh or Dr Montek Singh Ahluwalliah, is essential if the fuel companies are given untrammeled powers to hike prices saying international prices are soaring.
This is unilateral, for the consumer does not know how the companies manage their financial affairs. Mismanagement costs are not accounted for. The easiest thing is to raise prices. There are many more taxes and levies on petrol and diesel, over which the people have no control.
Efficiency system calls for a set-up which minimizes the impact on common man. You have to think about streamlining and reducing other levies on fuel.
You speak about bringing down food prices inflation, but you simply think that the system, that is the common people would absorb hike in prices in course of time. But there is a limit to this.
Friday, January 14, 2011
Let common people, the privilegeless, know what transpires between the privileged in court regarding corruption
Ahead of the turbulent future that holds out for the humankind, with whirlwinds of savage forms of corruption, wrong-doings and debauchery of all sorts ruling the roost, it seems there would be a silver lining of sorts regarding the people’s demand for transparency.
The good and evil always co-exist together, for Satan lingers with the angels, quoting the sacred scriptures, to at least that way mislead even the straight and honest ones.
Perhaps in the quest of the people to claim a right to transparency of the goings-on, absolute privilege, qualified privilege and the like enjoyed by legislatures, judiciary, media etc would take a new twist at least in the distant future to give way to openness about what would be transpiring in the sacred portals of these august fora.
Meaning, people would want to know each and every utterances in courts, legislatures and other houses without camouflage, without juicy contents being suppressed. For by then, there would be openness of the form we have never seen before. That way, if the situation would have been such in the coming weeks, the people would know what lawyer Ram Jethmalani would utter in the Supreme Court on behalf of, say Prashant Bhushan and Shanti Bhushan , lawyers who have taken it upon themselves to work against corruption in the highest judiciary.
Ram Jethamalani has already told the court that if contempt of court proceedings are pursued, it would open a Pandora’s box. The court has said, okay let us witness what would be there in the box.
I feel there is no meaning in Jethmalani, Shanti Bhushan, Prashant Bhushan et al exposing all those stuff before two judges or a few judges, if it comes up before a larger bench, enjoying absolute privilege and ‘We the People’ who have framed the Constitution kept in the dark.
Times have changed, let the whole world know what would be transpiring in court. The apex court can definitely help the people in this regard.
Thursday, January 13, 2011
The party is not too keen to take V.S.Achuthanandan back into the politburo?
The enlarged central committee meeting has been over a long time ago and subsequent PB meetings have discussed other matters too, but there is no inkling about seniormost CPM leader and Kerala Chief Minister V.S.Achuthanandan back into the politburo.
It seems VS is resigned to the fate that he would not be re-elevated to the highest executive body of the party in which the seniormost leader had a pride of place until comparatively newer members had consolidated their position.
Also it seems old war horses need not entertain hopes of rekindling the party with old views which have no moorings in the present dispensation. Perhaps the party does not want to live a life as in a social set-up of a century ago.
The PB is having a two-day sitting in Kolkata to take stock of various ongoing affairs and to plan ahead as to how to campaign for the ensuing Assembly elections in April-May next year. The party would try to retain its governance in Kerala and West Bengal, which is a difficult proposition in the given situation.
Meanwhile, VS has infuriated those who matter by seeking CBI inquiry into the outside lottery mafia in Kerala.
Perhaps, he is convinced that there is no gain by kowtowing to the official line in Kerala as well as at the central level in the party.
No one will bell the cat, isn’t it?
Lawyer Ram Jethmalani says everyone was aware of the goings-on in the judiciary during the last two years, but no one was prepared to speak out for fear of the Damocles Sword of contempt of court.
Now lawyers Prashant Bhushan and Shanti Bhushan have come out with statements about the wrong-doings of the judiciary, as claimed by them.
They have not been prepared to apologise to the apex court for their statement regarding specific corruption in the judiciary.
All these things emphasise one thing: No one should be kept infallible by the provisions of the Constitution and the laws concerned.
Earlier, the government had the responsibility selecting judges, but even that responsibility has been given over to the judiciary in the form of a collegiums. It seems the judiciary got further strengthened this way. And if someone had the propensity to go awry, by the lure of money or other forms of gratification, there was every opportunity provided by the added power. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
There is no point in blaming judges in a blanket manner, but if there is cogent proof, the people should be apprised of the fact one way or other. The weapon of contempt of court should not stand in the way of the people’s right to know everything. There should be checks and balances, anyway.
Coalition compulsions are there all right; but there should be a limit to it
Coalition compulsions have been the political talk at the national level and these influence even many of the state administration political fronts.
If the quintessential dimension of any governance is concern for the people coalition bandwagons need not be that nagging. For there are methods in the democratic set-up to deal with such situations, the last resort being bidding goodbye to the intolerable dispensation.
If a good-intentioned front approaches the electorate again with a clear mind and sincere objective, the people of India would not let it down.
Coalition compulsions need not be that indispensable, leaving everything to the whims and fancies of some partners whose political support maintains the government in question.
There should be limits set to every form of misdeeds being done by partners, guided by their shenanigans. If price situation cannot be taken care of because of coalition compulsions, drastic action should be taken to save the people from intolerable situation.
Even when common people are reeling under very many pressures, big companies and super-earning entities, which are allowed to absorb windfall profits without comparable cuts, have a field day. This is not to assert that large companies should be held in check, but their sweeping profits should be shared with the tax payers for which the government should take necessary action. The money thus obtained should be utilised for welfare measures.
What is the utility of a coalition for the people if their crucial interests are not taken care of. Bureaucrats, sitting on easy chairs, may brief the government in their own comfortable way, but it is the bounden duty of the political dispensation to feel the pulse and go in for drastic action.
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Price rise is a real issue, common people are suffering
India of the masses is suffering from the unabated price rise of various commodities which craves attention of various governments.
The Central Government and the State Governments may have many things to say, but there can be no alibi, for the people would have no faith in shirking responsibility. What must be done is a co-ordinated effort by the Central Government and the State Governments to bring down the prices by a slew of measures.
What is worse is the situation on the food prices front which does not indicate much progress in declension.
A meeting was held under the chairmanship of Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh and attended by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, Food and Civil Supplies Minister Sharad Pawar, Home Minister P.Chidambaram and Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalliah to take stock of the situation.
Action taken was stated at the meeting, and perhaps what is more to be done would be discussed at the next meeting. Everyone agrees with one thing; that the prices have skyrocketed and there was not much respite even after all the measures that have already been launched.
That means more drastic measures are required; like import in bulk quantity of items in short supply and strict vigil against hoarding and artificial creature of adverse conditions.
In the past centuries, India had suffered serious famines, millions had perished for want of life-sustaining food, even in meagre quantity.
That does not justify an India of the third millennium, poised to pop on to the Moon and Mars. Let us first take care of the food materials.
Monday, January 10, 2011
Silence is most strident form of protest; just ignore tormentors
While watching the chat of ONV Kurup and M.T.Vasudevan Nair in a television channel the other day, I was stricken stark by the revelation that the form of protest that is most strident is silence.
Mind you, those who oppressed you the most would be hit hard if you don’t protest by outward gestures in any way. Just ignore them, however high and mighty they are. They would become puny figures in front of your silence, doing nothing about their taunts and machinations. They would become ordinary mortals in front of your higher moral ground through silence.
Jesus Christ remained silent in front of earthly accusers and the judge and jury. He said his kingdom is a different one.
Like that, your tormentors, those who want to do injustice to you for no fault of yours, maybe to please some pygmies, would lie shattered in the higher scheme of things in this world itself, not to speak of the other world.
I had occasion to interact with the noblest of souls in media and the silliest of them whom I simply ignored and dumped them in the thrash basket of my soul.
Dangerous situation as criminals escape to foreign countries and fetch a safe haven there
Kerala’s police chief Jacob Punnoose has disclosed a grave situation regarding the foreign connection of a large number of crimes committed in Kerala.
DGP Jacob Punnoose has said about 10,000 cases of 2010 had foreign connection of one sort or other.
It is a dangerous situation that anyone who commits a crime in the state can freely roam around in some foreign country, particularly the Gulf.
The DGP has observed that there cannot be direct investigation in the foreign country as the Kerala Police Act does not allow this sort of probe.
Many crime committers had secured bogus passports and made the slip from airports in Kerala using fraudulent documents obtained with the connivance of vested interests.
If the situation goes on like this, marauders of various kinds sublimating their deeds in foreign countries would be able to dictate policy matters to various governments in India with their ill-gotten wealth.
Saturday, January 08, 2011
What is the trump card of K.R.Gowri Amma, does she have any?
A great plenum, as far as the party is concerned at least, is being held at Alapuzha on Sunday. The plenum refers to the one of Janathipathya Samrakshana Samithi (Democracy Protection Council) of K.R.Gowri Amma.
The crucial issue is whether the JSS should remain within the Congress Party-led UDF or quit the bandwagon to join the CPM-led LDF. There has been no overt invitation from the CPM to the JSS. However there were hints in the media that the CPM would be prepared to take back Gowri Amma, alone. There is no prospect of JSS being drafted as a partner of the LDF. But who knows what happens at the end? Gowri Amma should open up and speak her mind to her acolytes, at least.
Media speculation underscores the fact that a majority of the workers would not follow Gowri Amma if she gravitates towards the LDF. For, the motive is to cling on to those who are poised to be in power the ensuing Assembly elections.
Gowri Amma feels that she was not given her due during the last Assembly elections as some Congress people were responsible for her rout. The 91-year-old stalwart hopes to have another innings at the Assembly elections, but she should have proper support from the Congress that she would not be betrayed this time. But who would come forward to please her, that is the question.
Or is it merely that she wants all the five Assembly seats this time also as in the past for the party to contest? In that case, so much of hullabaloo was not needed, perhaps.
Many minuscule parties in the UDF are scared this time, that they would not get as many seats as last time, not to speak of Cabinet representation. T.M.Jacob, R.Balakrishna Pillai and some others are not feeling comfy. For the UDF, seat allocation talks would be somewhat fiendish, as it may not be able to appease all of them.
Thursday, January 06, 2011
Shouldn’t there be a renaming of the daily print product?
In olden days newspapers were the only source of information for the people, and that too received after weeks or months of the event happening and reporters or agents carrying the news piece physically.
About those times, reports spoke about the news of Abraham Lincoln having been assassinated reached the UK months afterwards as brought there by a ship.
Now news is spreading like wild fire every moment, by digital and news channels. There is no point in the daily newspapers carrying the next day the news of the previous day as published by channels and other screen media like internet the previous day.
Daily print medium has relevance only for analyzing, expanding , giving wider backgrounders, and pointing out what next as comprehensible for a wider section of people, maybe with encyclopaedic explanation. The five Ws and one H aspects had already been carried by other channels the previous day.
So why not renaming newspapers as Viewspapers or so?
Wednesday, January 05, 2011
A lot of Keralites losing realms of common sense, dharma, gobbling up lust of all sorts
It batters the realms of common sense of the people of Kerala that various muddles could take place in this most literate state, considering the recent revelations made in various sectors.
People could get government jobs without even appearing for a test. The Kerala Public Service Commission feigns ignorance about the forgerers going strong in government posts as it is not concerned with the goings-on once advice about appointments is released. Therefore, it is not bothered about usurpers of posts.
So many of them have been continuing like this after paying lakhs to conmen. There were three from one family!!!
Still, latest revelations speak about candidates in PSC test centres getting answers in mobile phones through specially designed sim cards.
And these were for selection of police officers who when recruited should be discharging justice and fairplay to the citizens!!!
And police officers who got initial selection had to get training in swimming. As they could not swim, they get the services of others to act for them. And the illegal substitutes are none other than those police officers who had passed out of the swimming training!!!
In State Bank of Travancore, Pathanamthitta, a plus-two educated girl on contract appointment as data entry operator, defrauded the government of about Rs 1.50 crore by making corrections in pay-in-slips and diverting the amount to personal accounts.
And there are other scams amounting to crores of rupees. Lately, the family members of Justice K.G.Balakrishnan, are accused of amassing assets hugely disproportionate to their known sources of income.
There should be an introspection in the society as to how the people have lost their quintessence of dharma, conscience, absorbed the ambience of lust of all sorts.
Karunanidhi’s plate is full of woes, latest being resignation of Azhagiri
Mullaperiyar and Tamil causes are sentimental for various Dravidian parties, and others as well in Tamil Nadu. To uphold these issues they would go to any extent, even looking a little foolish to outsiders, going beyond the realm of common sense.
Another point of interest seems to be the family political fiefdom with Kalaignar Dr Muthuvel Karunanidhi as the head of the family. No doubt, Karunanidhi wanted M.K.Stalin to be his political successor and Chief Minister. Stalin was made the Deputy Chief Minister who became de facto CM.
For retaining the ground clear for him, Karunanidhi sent eldest son M.K.Azhagiri to the Centre, as a Cabinet Minister in the UPA II Government of Dr Manmohan Singh. Azhagiri, to whom Hindi and English are Greek and Latin, was simply whiling away his time, with bureaucrats and other DMK stalwarts, including his half sister Kanimozhi, holding the reins in Delhi.
Raja who was Communications and Information Technology Minister at the Centre has been humbled after his being cornered in the 2 G Spectrum allocation scam causing a presumptive loss of Rs 1.76 lakh crore, as reckoned by the Comptroller and Auditor-General of India.
Now as the Raja issue has become hot bad topic, Azhagiri has stepped in to make a pound of flesh in the given circumstances, seeking ouster of Raja from the DMK. He has resigned from the post of Central Minister and DMK’s organising secretary. Raja is the propaganda secretary. Of course, the exit letter has been given to party chief and father Karunanidhi. Kanimozhi has also been not soft to Azhagiri, it seems.
Azhagiri wants to remain in Tamil Nadu itself and he is preparing the ground work for his future moves. The situation would be interesting in Tamil Nadu, with rival J.Jayalalithaa of the AIADMK closely monitoring the situation to make it congenial to her.
Tuesday, January 04, 2011
Genetically modified crops; wide discussion transcending usual front followers should be welcome
CPM politburo member S.Ramachandran Pillai has shot the first salvo, rather quite unexpected revelation from the leftist camp.
Lately, another strong PB member Sitaram Yechury has offered his support to SRP’s assertion. Other middle level and a little lower level functionaries are taking to safe attitudinal postures, in accordance with ideological postures, but incorporating the latest U-turn by the party honchos.
No doubt, SRP’s argument has been well-thought out by the party’s decision makers. Perhaps, they had not taken its strong ally, the CPI whose leaders have taken blanket opposition to the GM crops.
In fact, SRP had wanted the technology to be pursued by government and related entities so that the innovations would not be a monopoly of multi-national companies like Monsanto. For no one can oppose research in scientific realm, particularly biotechnological innovations.
The principles of selective exposure and selective perception and retention as proposed in mass communication theories are being caught up with in the media sector in Kerala regarding the new attitude of the CPM. Is it a new attitude or a considered view to oppose only the monopolisation of MNCs?
Those who are supporting GM crops are exposing themselves to SRP’s views as direct support and those who are opposing it are also trying to cling on to their considered views on GM crops, saying SRP has been only opposing private monopolisation of GM crops.
Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) cotton and brinjal are only examples of genetically modified crops. Other things would follow. Many may not have absorbed the fact that Bt is a bacterium that is being reacted with organic bacteria of the native crops to produce a gene that would be better suited for increased productivity, immunity from diseases and propensity to withstand various aspects of harsh weather, soil and water conditions etc.
Great discussions should follow, incorporating views of independent scientists and intellectuals.
Sunday, January 02, 2011
VS committed to CBI probe in lotteries scam, PB to discuss its repercussions
Thiruvananthapuram: CPM state secretariat meeting on Sunday discussed the issue of Chief Minister V.S.Achuthanandan writing a letter to the Centre, first to the Home Minister and then to the Prime Minister, seeking a CBI inquiry into the lotteries scam allegedly involving Rs 80,000 crore over a period of about five years.
It has been widely reported that Finance Minister Dr Thomas Isaac was against the issue being referred to for a CBI investigation. There was protest against the fact that the corruption involved during the previous UDF regime was not referred to.
Anyway, the party secretariat meeting which was attended by General Secretary Prakash Karat was told by him that the issue would be discussed at the next politburo meeting to be held on January 12. So for the time being the party state secretariat meeting was spared the responsibility of arriving at a decision.
Certainly there was vertical cleavage between the two factions in the party in the state regarding the outside lotteries muddle.
From the single-handed decision taken by Chief Minister V.S.Achuthanandan to get a CBI investigation into the matter, it was clear that he was determined to pursue the issue, come what may.
He had withstood his demotion from the politburo to the central committee previously Now political analysts are keenly watching the developments to see whether there would be a further demotion even as the state is going in for Assembly elections along with West Bengal and three other states during April-May 2011.
Right to Services Bill: Nitish Kumar is doing it
I have always been campaigning through writings for enactment of a Right to Service Bill, both at the Central and State levels, as a corollary or even follow-up of the Right to Information legislation. But governments have not been able to frame such a piece of law as yet, for various reasons of pressure from within, from coalition partners or other extraneous considerations.
Now the irrepressible Nitish Kumar, Chief Minister of Bihar, has come up with precisely that piece of legislation. Please read the report:
THE Central government may have failed to introduce Civil Services Bill which was drafted almost two years ago, but Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar riding high on his landslide victory is moving ahead fast in undertaking massive administrative reforms in his state.
Bihar government plans to introduce a Right to Service Bill, which envisages a stipulated time for services to citizens, such as issuing a ration card, power connection and birth and death certificates. And once the Bill is passed, there will be a major crackdown on efficient and lazy bureaucracy in the state. Currently, citizens need to wait for a long time to get these basic services, but this new Act will ensure severe punishment for bureaucrats who fail to deliver those basic services on stipulated time.
The Central government’s Civil Services Bill is however different in nature. Indian bureaucrats have been closely watching the development related to the Bill as it envisages to break them free from the clutches of their political masters in matters related to transfers among others.
Now listen to the version of Nitish Kumar himself.
What is this right to service?
It is going to be the biggest administrative reform in Bihar. During my Vishwas Yatras, I saw that people had to make numerous rounds of government offices for the simplest of jobs.
That is why we took this innovative step. According to the provisions of this Bill, simple works like issuing caste certificates, character certificates, medical certificates, birth or death certificates and passports will have to done in set time. If the work is not done within the deadline, the official concerned will be fined. One of the most important provisions is that the fine will be deducted from the official’s salary. These are small steps but will create a huge impact.
We are also planning to take the help of information technology later. We feel that people should not have to visit government offices for these simple things. The government is establishing common service centres, known as Vasudha Kendras, in every panchayat. These will be equipped with computers and internet connections. People will be able to drop their applications at these centres. They will be able to view the status of their applications on the internet.
This can be implemented at a later stage. But right now, we want to ensure that the common man gets the services of civil servants. Our main aim is to ensure that the common man has minimum possible interaction with government officials for getting his work done.
What is the status of the Bill?
The initial draft is ready. I am actively involved with preparing it. This week also, I had a meeting with senior officials on this. You can expect it in the next session of the Assembly. It will apply to all public servants. We are very clear about it. Both the Centre and the state government are spending money for development and this must reflect on the ground.
It is time other state governments also followed suit. Kerala Government should take a cue from Nitish Kumar and frame the legislation for rendering effective services to the people.
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