POSTED BY Buzz ON Sep 09, 2012 AT 23:47 IST ,  Edited At: Sep 09, 2012 23:47 IST

Brief facts of the case

  • Aseem Trivedi, a Kanpur-based cartoonist, participated in, and displayed some cartoons at an Anna Hazare Jan Lok Pal rally held in December last year at the Bandra Kurla Complex in Mumbai
  • Soon thereafter his website cartoonsagainstcorruption, was suspended by web company Big Rock after a notice from the cyber wing of Mumbai police
  • Trivedi set up a Facebook page and also put up those cartoons at Google's blogspot.com, knowing Google's anti-censorship stance. The government would clearly find it more difficult to persuade Google to take off these cartoons unlike “Big Rock,” which hosted his suspended site.
  • A member of Republican Party of India, Amit Katarnayea filed a complaint against Trivedi
  • In January, a case of sedition (under IPC section 124A) was filed against him at the Beed district court.
  • In another case before the Bombay HC, Trivedi was charged with insulting national symbols, under Prevention of Insults of National Honour Act, 1971.
  • The other charge against him of course was violation of section 66A of the Information Technology (Amendment) Act, 2008
  • A team of Mumbai Police was sent to Kanpur on August 30 with non-bailable warrants, but by then Trivedi had moved to Delhi from where he contacted the BKC police station who asked him to reach Mumbai on his own
  • He surrended on Sept 8 night and was taken into custody.
  • Activist Shivam Vij reported: Trivedi has for the moment refused to hire a lawyer and does not intend to apply for bail: "I want to first see how a British-era law like sedition is going to be applied against a cartoonist in free India."
  • Today, Sept 9, he was remanded to police custody till September 16 by a local court in Bandra
  • Outside the court, a defiant Trivedi said, "If telling the truth makes me a traitor then I am one. Even Mahatma Gandi was called traitor and if I am booked under sedition for doing service to the nation then I will continue to do so."
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POSTED BY Buzz ON Sep 09, 2012 AT 23:47 IST, Edited At: Sep 09, 2012 23:47 IST
POSTED BY Buzz ON Feb 20, 2012 AT 16:13 IST ,  Edited At: Feb 20, 2012 16:13 IST

S.L. Rao in the Telegraph:

Many people have written off the Anna Hazare movement against corruption. They are blind to the effects already visible in orders, policies and procedures. Hazare brought together the widespread disgust against the pervading corruption in our society and the apparent freedom from punishment of those identified as culpable. All political parties and the government combined in a coordinated way to discredit ‘Team Anna’ and to diminish his influence. Public disgust and anger remain and will express itself in votes cast at elections, and also when a new movement is launched by a more sophisticated public leader, who will not express himself in the crude way that Hazare frequently did. Such a movement will make full use of the internet and the social media, having learnt from the viral spread of the song, “Why this Kolaveri di”.

Dramatic changes have already occurred in a number of areas. They will make things more difficult for the corrupt minister and bureaucrat as well as for the incompetent bureaucrat.

Read the full article at the Telegraph: Fruits of Public Anger

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POSTED BY Buzz ON Feb 20, 2012 AT 16:13 IST, Edited At: Feb 20, 2012 16:13 IST
POSTED BY Buzz ON Dec 30, 2011 AT 00:38 IST ,  Edited At: Dec 30, 2011 00:38 IST

It could have been foretold by anyone by late afternoon. The UPA was not only in a hopeless minority, under most severe opposition from its own constituent, Trinamool Congress, but had no intention of putting the bill to vote.

The buzz had been that a bitter exchange could be engineered in the house to disrupt the proceedings of the house.

Through the evening, TV Channel CNN-IBN kept mentioning the possibility of a "bitter exchange" to disrupt the house that could take the proceedings to midnight.

It even mentioned Rajniti Singh by name.

Political analyst Yogendra Yadav called it the worst form of match-fixing. He called the UPA tactics as trying to be too clever by half but hoped that it would not come to this sorry pass and this particular drama would not be enacted because it had been announced on national television.

But clearly, there was desperation in the ruling camp, and the claim seemed to be confirmed when Rajneeti Singh proceeded to tear up the bill in Rajya Sabha, and as the video clip shows, the minister concerned did not seem to be even making a half-hearted attempt to stop him..

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POSTED BY Buzz ON Dec 30, 2011 AT 00:38 IST, Edited At: Dec 30, 2011 00:38 IST
POSTED BY Buzz ON Dec 27, 2011 AT 23:59 IST ,  Edited At: Dec 28, 2011 00:14 IST

In the end, the Congress-led UPA was left red-faced when it showed abysmal floor-management and allowed the Constitution Amendment Bill that was required to be passed for making the Lokpal into a constitutional body to be defeated in Lok Sabha.

The rules are very simple:

Special Majority

8.Constitution Amendment Bills have to be passed in each House of Parliament by a special majority ie. by a majority of the total membership of that House and by a majority of not less than two-thirds of the members of the House “present and voting”. The expression “total membership” means the total number of members comprising the House irrespective of whether there are vacancies or absentees on any account. The expression “present and voting”, means members who vote for “ayes” or for “noes”. Members who are present in the House and vote “abstention” either through the electronic vote recorder or on a voting slip or in any other manner, are not treated as “present and voting.”


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POSTED BY Buzz ON Dec 27, 2011 AT 23:59 IST, Edited At: Dec 28, 2011 00:14 IST
POSTED BY Buzz ON Dec 27, 2011 AT 06:21 IST ,  Edited At: Dec 27, 2011 06:21 IST

The Hindu editorial says the Lokpal and Lokayuktas Bill, 2011 presented with much fanfare in Lok Sabha is "hopelessly ineffectual and constitutionally suspect" and "nothing less than a betrayal of national trust":

The key provisions of the new Bill relating to the selection of the nine-member Lokpal, its anti-corruption functions and powers, and administrative control over India's premier criminal investigation agency mock that purpose.

After noting that the opportunity to confer genuine independence on the Central Bureau of Investigation is being lost by keeping it out of the Lokpal's purview, the Hindu editorial points out the problems with the constitutional validity of some basic provisions of the Bill:

The inclusion of minorities among the groups given reservation in the nine-member body is bound to be challenged on the ground that it amounts to a quota being given on grounds of religion. While this issue has little bearing on tackling corruption, the deep and seemingly irreconcilable political divisions it has created, reflected in the manner in which it dominated the parliamentary debate on the Bill, is bound to have a bearing on its passage. Is this a ploy to let anti-corruption legislation fall victim to a wholly extraneous issue – reservation? Will it be allowed to degenerate, as in the case of the women's reservation bill, into a legislative exercise that everyone claims to support but few really want?

Meanwhile, Arvind Kejriwal counters the constant propaganda by Congress that Team Anna's attitude is dictatorial in an interview to NDTV:

The first Bill that we drafted was on 1st December 2010. After that this Bill, through several public consultations, several seminars, several meetings, has gone through 14 versions. And if you see the latest version and compare it to the first one, it has completely undergone change. And we are still seeking suggestions from the people. There were 3000 suggestions that we got from the website itself. We've incorporated many of these suggestions. So it will be completely wrong to say that we are saying "Either this Bill or no other bill". It is completely wrong to say that "my way or the highway". I think it is the Government that is adopting "my way or the highway". It is not we who are adopting "my way or the highway."

Comparing the debates over the Food Security Bill and the Lokpal Bill, Hartosh Singh Bal points out in Open:

Anna and members of his team have been willing to subject themselves to intense media scrutiny. Can we even begin to say the same about the Food Security Bill?

When Sonia Gandhi rides roughshod over serious objections for the sake of a few state elections looming ahead, we see an abdication of governance far more severe than in the Lokpal Bill’s case.

As for the bogey of Team Anna dictating legislation to Parliament, as Prashant Bhushan and others have often pointed out, they are only lobbying for what they believe is right -- Parliament is free to ignore them. And may we add, it is the party whips that would act as the real dictators even when it comes to voting in Parliament: individual MP's will not have the freedom to vote as per their conscience.

While both the BJP and the CPM have already announced that they intend to move a number of amendments to the bill, on the issue of reservations, there seems to be genuine concern that the controversy could derail the whole process. This is what Arvind Kejriwal told NDTV:

NDTV: Let's look at one of the things that people are worried could derail the Bill, the minority quota issue. Now, it's one thing to say that the Lokpal must be representative in nature to reflect India's pluralism, but there are many concerns that this is an aspect. It was introduced, taken out, re-introduced through the corrigendum. That this is something that could legally derail the Bill. Are you concerned?

Arvind Kejriwal: Two things are there. One is, we need a very, very strong and robust selection process. Once you have a robust selection process let there be reservations. We have absolutely no problem. If you have a robust selection process you can get an extremely good Muslim. There are so many Muslims who are very good people. You can get an extremely good Christian. You can get an extremely good person from a minority community. You can get an extremely good person from the Dalit community, if you have a good selection process. So we have absolutely no problems if there were reservation. But what is happening is that politics is being played in the name of reservation. They plan to completely scuttle the whole process in the name of reservation. You have reservation. We have absolutely no problem. But have a robust selection process. And if you had a bad selection process, then reservation or no reservation, you will get bad people.

NDTV: But Pranab Mukherjee says in Parliament that now the Courts will decide whether this is legally tenable or not. A number of other people have suggested that one way of doing it was not to formalize a minority quota, but like, for example, when you form the Cabinet, you say there should be people of all religions, communities and castes.

Arvind Kejriwal: As far as reservation is concerned, this thing is that we completely leave it on the Parliament to decide whether they want to have reservation. We are not against it at all.

NDTV: But are you concerned about the controversy will derail the Bill?

Arvind Kejriwal: That is what, the politics of this would derail the Bill. But secondly, this present bill is so bad, that in this form it should not be passed.

Santosh Desai adds in the TOI:

The difference between reserving jobs in the government or seats in the Parliament with reserving places on the Lokpal is that in the former instance, the attempt is to ensure that the aspirations of all are represented adequately, that the system has ensured that all voices have been heard so that it can take a genuinely informed decision. The final outcome however, is based on secular considerations, on the merits of the situation. At some point, only merit counts; what matters is the argument, not the identity of the person making the argument. At least some of us need to be charged with the responsibility of looking after all of us; for otherwise we could move to a situation where only a Dalit judge could preside over a case involving a Dalit, and so on. We would in the name of promoting inclusiveness, be retreating into the past, freezing existing social configurations in their current form and reducing all of us into who we are. We would be implicitly arguing that individuals can only speak on behalf of others like themselves, and not of larger ideas and ideals.

Reservations have a delicate task to perform- they need to make up for the inequalities of the past by recognising their source and reversing the imbalance while at the same time working to free us from the labels that imprison us. This balance extends to the system of governance where issues pertaining to identity need both to be acknowledged and risen above. A system which considers itself incapable of rising above narrow identity concerns at any level, will end up perpetuating the very evil it ostensibly fights against. By reserving seats on the Lokpal, a line just might have been crossed. We may just have accepted that our future cannot rise above our past.

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POSTED BY Buzz ON Dec 27, 2011 AT 06:21 IST, Edited At: Dec 27, 2011 06:21 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep ON Dec 15, 2011 AT 23:56 IST ,  Edited At: Dec 15, 2011 23:56 IST

 Writing in the Telegraph, Mukul Kesavan says that "despite the fact that Anna Hazare, Arvind Kejriwal, Prashant Bhushan and Kiran Bedi seem at various times to be eccentric, hectoring, pious, self-righteous, reactionary and complicit with shady godmen, there’s little doubt that so far they have won the rhetorical battle against the United Progressive Alliance government, their ‘civil society’ critics and other appalled pundits and commentators":

...while they rhetorically berate corrupt elected politicians, they don’t repudiate the institutions of constitutional democracy: they offer, instead, detailed prospectuses for reforming them...

Critics might find the suggestions made by Hazare and his lieutenants unworkable or deluded, but Team Anna can’t be accused of not offering concrete ways of reforming what it sees as corrupt or debauched governance. Nor can its critique of the actually existing democracy be summarily dismissed, if only because it seems to resonate with large numbers of people who turn out to be counted...

Kejriwal’s genius for mobilization and Anna’s scary willingness to die for his cause seem to have created an irresistible force and Parliament is turning out to be rather less than an immovable object. Apart from a reservation or two about the status of the Central Bureau of Investigation, the Opposition is now publicly committed to every major provision of the jan lok pal bill...

The government’s bill will be the jan lok pal bill in every important detail. Rumours already swirl that the ruling dispensation will agree to place the prime minister and Class C and D employees within the lok pal’s jurisdiction. The subordination of the CBI to this super ombudsman seems to be the sticking point and here too the government will find a form of words to which it can surrender. This will be both an utter rout and a famous victory.

Read the full piece at the Telegraph: A Very Public Tutorial

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POSTED BY Sundeep ON Dec 15, 2011 AT 23:56 IST, Edited At: Dec 15, 2011 23:56 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep ON Oct 10, 2011 AT 23:57 IST ,  Edited At: Oct 10, 2011 23:57 IST

Team Anna --  Anna Hazare, Arvind Kejriwal, senior lawyers Shanti Bhushan (co-chairman) and Prashant Bhushan, and the former Karnataka Lokayukta, Santosh Hegde -- had been insisting from the beginning that they wanted a live telecast of the proceedings of the Joint Drafting Committing meetings with the government representatives -- Finance minister Pranab Mukherjee (Chairman), Law Minister Salman Khursheed, Telecommunications Minister Kapil Sibal, the former Law Minister, Veerappa Moily, and Home Minister P. Chidambaram.

Eventually, it was decided that the proceedings would be audio-recorded and those audio tapes would be made public only later.

Now Right to Information (RTI) activist S.C. Aggarwal has secured the tapes from the government through an application. The government did not initially wish to release the tapes as the RTI Commissioner wanted to take the opinion of the law ministry before allowing these tapes to be made public.

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FILED IN:  Lokayukta & Lokpal|UPA
POSTED BY Sundeep ON Oct 10, 2011 AT 23:57 IST, Edited At: Oct 10, 2011 23:57 IST
POSTED BY writeback ON Aug 31, 2011 AT 01:44 IST ,  Edited At: Aug 31, 2011 01:44 IST

We start this blog for mail received from our readers, the first one being Ambar Walia from New Delhi:

There was a time I supported the Lokpal movement. That was when it was sane, had purpose, was coherent in its mission, and its raison d’etre — We are Indians, and we are tired of the corruption that plagues our nation. Everyone is accountable. That is a worthy cause indeed. I was moved during the protests and the fasts the last time around. People took to them spontaneously across the nation, and the support to Anna Hazare’s crusade was overwhelming. It showed me that people today were not apathetic; that they cared. More than anything it gave me hope for our future. Today, I am sad to say I stand against that very same crowd; I stand against Anna Hazare — even if alone.

Let me begin by saying I believe that the Lokpal bill needs to be passed. Our government needs to be accountable, and the terrible corruption that has plagued our country for years needs to stop. I hold all that to be true. And I believe that there indeed needs to be a radical revolution in our nation for that to happen. However, that revolution is not political in nature, but far more fundamental. The revolution needs to occur in the minds of every single citizen of our great nation.

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POSTED BY writeback ON Aug 31, 2011 AT 01:44 IST, Edited At: Aug 31, 2011 01:44 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep ON Aug 29, 2011 AT 23:13 IST ,  Edited At: Aug 29, 2011 23:13 IST

PTI reports:

Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar today said in the House that notices for moving a Privilege Motion against Puri and Bedi for "allegedly" using "derogatory and defamatory" language against politicians have been received.

Kumar said she had received notices from P L Punia, Jagadambika Pal, Ramashankar Rajbhar, Lalchand Kataria, Mirza Aslam Beg, Praveen Aron and Shailendra Kumar.

"The matter is under my consideration," Kumar said.

During Anna Hazare's agitation at Ramlila grounds on the Lokpal issue, Puri and Bedi had allegedly targeted politicians and used derogatory and defamatory language against them.

In the Rajya Sabha, Deputy Chairman K Rahman Khan told agitated members that the privilege notices given by Ramgopal Yadav (SP) and Md Adeeb (Ind) were under consideration of the Chairman.

Mr Puri while expressing regrets for using the words 'naalayak' (incompetent) and 'ganwar' (a word often used to describe a backward and an illiterate person) has said that he was very emotional and could have opted for better words. "If I am called, I am ready to go before the Parliament and clarify," while maintaining that he still stood by 95% of his remarks.

Kiran Bedi, on her part, has clearly said:

Sorry no apology for being demonstratively a voice of public anguish. Prepared for any punishment.

As far as remarks against the Parliament or our netas is concerned, while a case could certainly be made against Mr Puri for the distasteful nature of his comments, a privilege motion -- in which, if found guilty of breach of privilege, the two can face up to 15 days in jail -- would certainly be an extreme over-reaction. Mr Puri would have certainly put off more than a few of those who otherwise are fans of his film work.  As for Ms Bedi, again, whether or not one agrees with her utterances or politics, as Lord Meghnad Desai pointed out, what she did and say can at worst be described as a piece of street theatre.

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POSTED BY Sundeep ON Aug 29, 2011 AT 23:13 IST, Edited At: Aug 29, 2011 23:13 IST
POSTED BY Sundeep ON Aug 25, 2011 AT 02:19 IST ,  Edited At: Aug 25, 2011 02:19 IST

Ashok Guha in the Telegraph:

So long as neither violence nor bribery is employed, democracy does not impose any further restrictions on the methods we use to persuade our representatives. It is at least partly a matter of taste whether one goes about it in the genteel fashion that would have pleased Messrs Manmohan Singh and Kapil Sibal or with high-visibility fasting and high-decibel drama...

No one can doubt that the issue we are presently concerned with is absolutely central to the future of our republic. Over the last several years, the members of this government have plundered the country on an unprecedented, indeed, astronomical, scale in the shelter of a supposedly incorruptible prime minister who adopted as his role models the Japanese monkeys of legend who saw no evil, heard no evil and spoke no evil. The credibility of the Indian State is in tatters.

Moreover, the deep penetration of mobile telephones into the countryside, the rapid expansion of rural television viewership, of literacy and computer-literacy, and the proliferation of social networks have changed the parameters of dissent...

Read on at the Telegraph

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POSTED BY Sundeep ON Aug 25, 2011 AT 02:19 IST, Edited At: Aug 25, 2011 02:19 IST
     
 
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