NEW THINKING ON ANTI-GRAFT DRIVE
By
M.L. Sondhi
The Pioneer, February 19, 1996
If we examine the three crucial decades since the Santhanam
Committee on Prevention of Corruption (1964) submitted its
report, we find contradictions of the political process of
the period anchored in the lack of will to modify the
vertical relationship between the central political
authority and civil society. The courage to carry out the
most salient idea mooted by the Santhanam Committee, that
is, its recommendation to institute a special procedure for
inquiry into specific allegations against Ministers, was
lacking. There was general talk of political reform, but
there was no power-wielder in the Indian polity who was
prepared to shoulder the personal burden of initiating a
multi-dimensional process for “righting the past wrongs”.
It is true that the recommendations of the
Santhanam Committee led directly to the setting up of the
Vigilance Commission for public employees and the
strengthening of the Central Bureau of Investigation. The
question of Conduct Rules for Ministers was also addressed,
but the key issue of starting a general process for
rectifying the wrongs committed in the past was not
seriously addressed. For their part Parliament, Media and
the Intelligentsia could not provide any broad-ranging
multidisciplinary discussion of corruption which could make
a serious dent on the ambiguity and ambivalence which
continued to prevail at the highest level of political
activities of the nation.
Mr. L.P. Singh, a member of the Santhanam
Committee contented himself with the pious hope that Indian
universities would make “a decisive contribution to the
enlightenment of the public mind and the restoration of
ethical standards.” He added: “If we succeed in taking care
of standards and values in our universities the moral
problem of the rest of society will take care of
themselves.” Unfortunately, there was no one at the
commanding heights of the Indian academia who saw it as his
appointed mission to stipulate a timely debate on the
serious issues concerning corruption in public life and
politics.
The anti-corruption experience in South
Korea has been historically very short coinciding with
President Kim Young Sam’s reform drive. The validity and
transparency of the information relating to “righting the
past wrongs” embodied in the prosecution of former
Presidents, Chun Doo-hwan and Roh Taewoo suggests a forward
strategy which if adopted in India would have the result of
opening the gates to a totally new world. One of the policy
planning advisers in Seoul, Lee Kark Bum, argues on good
grounds that the Korean initiative against corruption is
stronger than ever because it has included the political
risk of ignoring influential voices which had advocated
condoning the misdemeanours of the two former Presidents in
the name of orderly conduct of public policy.
The scope of this political innovation is
related to a definition of national interest which regards
corruption as much as a security challenge as those in a
traditional sense. The breaking of the nexus between
business and politics has become a core theme of both
development and security in an era where there is increasing
recognition of non-military means of protection for building
democratic societies. The Kim Young Sam presidency has
drawn the conclusion that South Korea’s security cannot
sufficiently be guaranteed by military measures, if legal
norms within the country are violated.
The reshaping of the Korean, polity is
currently taking place on a broader canvass in which
transparency in financial transactions, the elimination of
havens for black money, and stringent ethical standards in
politics have all gained real substance and are not merely
the pursuit of a mirage.
In India a solution to the recurrent
patterns of repression has been the setting up of the Human
Rights Commission which has in a short time greatly enhanced
the effectiveness of the work being done for fostering
social and economic rights and the punishment of human
rights violators. Korea can be India’s guide to new
thinking and action on the problems of corruption. Some
examples of existing arrangements in Korea which might prove
useful in setting up a Permanent Commission against
corruption in India would be found in the Public Officials
Ethics Law and the legal systems dealing with “real-name
transactions” and real estate registration. It should be
noted that all “benami” transactions have been outlawed in
Korea. The political and administrative competence of those
in charge of the Kim Young Sam reform drive has bolstered
Seoul’s confidence and now the process of overcoming the
negative legacies of authoritarian rule has developed a
momentum of its own.
The democratisation of the decision-making
process has enabled President Kim to awaken the political
conscience of Korean society yet again building on his
personal record of a 23-day Gandhian hunger strike in the
early eighties when he led the protest against the
military-backed authoritarian rule. It is true of course,
that he has the entrenched vested interests to contend with
and those who propagate the view that setting high ethical
standards is basically naïve and unrealistic in the
Hobbesian world of politics. It is true that except during
the short period of the emergency, India has been able to
guarantee free political choice through elections, but as
the current turmoil over “hawala” shows national self-esteem
cannot be maintained if money power continues to corrupt the
political system. The conventional wisdom among western
observers and among many Indians as well has been that in
seeking economic prosperity for the nation a fair amount of
corruption is part of the game in pursuit of economic
growth. In this context Kim Young Sam’s experience in Korea
is radically different and quite instructive. He has
provided his country with an international image and voice
commensurate with high ethical standards.
Certainly the task of dealing with
corruption and scandals like “hawala” and “Bofors” in a
continental size country like India is not easy. In many
ways India has become like Italy where the influence of the
mafia has been around a long period of time. The Santhanam
Report had provided an agenda for serious changes in Indian
polity and society, but it failed to nudge real reforms
ahead. The Korean example can serve as a catalyst for
overcoming laxity and scepticism. It also shows that an
anti-corruption drive can be given a permanent political
expression if proper lessons are drawn from both traditional
discourse on moral issues and from concrete thinking for
making financial dealings fully transparent in the interests
of competitive efficiency in the economy. Both strands have
to be woven into a liberating vision of the possibilities of
political reform and restructuring. |