Friday, August 26, 2011

Lokpal Act alone won't help eradicate corruption: Rahul



Breaking his silence, Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhion Friday asserted that Lokpal Act alone would not help eradicate corruption and appeared to disapprove Anna Hazare's fast, saying "individual dictates" must not weaken democratic process as dangerous precedent could be set.

Agreeing that "corruption is pervasive" which operates at "every level", Gandhi said in the Lok Sabha that a set of effective laws, along with creation of a statutory institution of Lokpal like the Election Commission, would be required to fight the malaise.

"We cannot wish away corruption by the mere desire to see it removed from our lives. This requires a comprehensive framework of action and a concerted political programme supported by all levels of the State from the highest to the lowest. Most importantly, it requires firm political will," he said during Zero Hour, amid noisy protests from NDA members.

Referring to Hazare's anti-corruption campaign, Gandhi said it has "helped the people to articulate" disillusionment and "I thank him for that".

At the same time, Gandhi said, "individual dictates, no matter how well-intentioned, must not weaken the democratic process....A tactical incursion, divorced from the machinery of an elected government that seeks to undo the checks and balances created to protect the supremacy of Parliament sets a dangerous precedent for a democracy."

"Today, the proposed law is against corruption. Tomorrow, the target may be something less universally heralded. It may attack the plurality of our society and democracy," Gandhi warned in the House as his sister Priyanka Gandhi watched from the visitors' gallery.

"Witnessing the events of the last few days, it would appear that the enactment of a single bill will usher in a corruption-free society. I have serious doubts about this belief," he said, adding an effective Lokpal "is only one element in the legal framework to combat corruption."

He maintained that "Lokpal institution alone cannot be a substitute for a comprehensive anti-corruption code" and "a set of effective laws is required".

Gandhi's speech was disrupted by NDA members, who were protesting his statement on the issue during Zero Hour. This triggered a clash with Congress members shouting back.

Speaker Meira Kumar ruled that she had allowed Gandhi to speak on the issue during Zero Hour after which Gandhi continued.

"We speak of a statutory Lokpal but our discussion cease at the point of its accountability to the people and the risk that it might itself become corrupt," the Congress general secretary told the packed House with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh being among those in attendance.

"Why not elevate the debate and fortify the Lokpal by making it a Constitutional body accountable to Parliament like the Election Commission of India? I feel the time has come for us to seriously consider this idea," he said.

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