C'da,

>*** Where will we find any? Any examples to cite here? Leaders who have changed things around in >the other states or in the Center?

Obviously, from Assam itself. Have you given up all hope, that you would have to seek for such attributes out of state? :-).

Such leaders have to be found, this need is paramount and my hope is that such leaders will emerge, albeit as a last desparate act.

>*** So should the people designate newspaper editors the investigator, prosecutor, judge, jury and executioner; so that they can then list the names of the CORRUPT on a monthly basis? What kind of democracy are we proposing here ? >Yet another desi-variant :-)?

Heh! heh! Do you see shades of McCarthyism here? Well, actually what I meant is that newspapers have a very important role to play. They can actually show that corruption cannot be the norm. They can unearth such practices thru investigative reporting, make the public, the administration and yes, the courts aware.

>*** Fair enough. How is the people's attitude going to be changed by DNB and other righteous people, such as Assam Netters, to fall in line with their desires? Mass re-education camps a-la- Mao or >moral-reorientation rallies :-)?

This is really not a question of righteousness of some mass re-education. But when the media bring corrupt practises to light, point fingers at those responsible, the public can take heart that things may turn around after all. At the moment, it looks like the public has been numbed in accepting corruption as the status quo.

--Ram



 

>From: Chan Mahanta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: "Ram Sarangapani" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [email protected]
>Subject: RE: [Assam] The meek shall be homeless -II
>Date: Sun, 24 Apr 2005 11:23:46 -0500
>
>>What Assam needs are very strong leaders who are interested in
>>Assam as opposed >to filling their pockets.
>
>
>*** Where will we find any?
>
>Any examples to cite here? Leaders who have changed things around in
>the other states or in the Center?
>
>
>*** Corruption is NOT the only problem, albeit a pervasive one.
>
>>One suggestion, I would have is for newspapers and other media to
>>give a >monthly list of all these corrupt officials and term them
>>as DNB has rightly >said 'anti national'.
>
>*** So should the people designate newspaper editors the
>investigator, prosecutor, judge, jury and executioner; so that they
>can then list the names of the CORRUPT on a monthly basis? What kind
>of democracy are we proposing here ?
>Yet another desi-variant :-)?
>
>Or should the people , having given up on the depend on the GOs now
>place their faith on NGo's? If soi, why have the GO's? Why not get
>rid of them and replace them with NGO's? Would that not bee the
>logical thing to do :-)?
>
>>So, unless people's attitude towards corruption is changed, yes
>>nothing is >going to happen.
>
>*** Fair enough. How is the people's attitude going to be changed by
>DNB and other righteous people, such as Assam Netters, to fall in
>line with their desires? Mass re-education camps a-la- Mao or
>moral-reorientation rallies :-)?
>
>
>*** Does it sound to Netters like solutions at all?
>
>-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>At 4:08 PM +0000 4/24/05, Ram Sarangapani wrote:
>>  >Question is how? What kind of rising will do the job? Hartals,
>> >gheraos, >bandhs, physical uttom-modhyom to the perceived guilty,
>
>
>>
>>What Assam needs are very strong leaders who are interested in
>>Assam as opposed to filling their pockets. It may not seem much,
>>but people (NGOs) are doing what they can. It was because of the
>>huge public outcry that there was a speedy trial and conviction of
>>the culprits who raped & murdered a 12 year old girl in Guwahati.
>>Bottomline is, if people so desire and are adamant that corruption
>>be stemmed, they have the ability to affect changes.
>>
>>One suggestion, I would have is for newspapers and other media to
>>give a monthly list of all these corrupt officials and term them as
>>DNB has rightly said 'anti national'. The newspapers can make sure
>>such errant officials are thrown off their jobs and summarily run
>>of town.
>>
>>Unfortunately, the situation seems to be such that corruption by
>>GMC/PWD or the ASEB is considered 'normal'.  The people it seems
>>have come to accept these probably as 'Generally Accepted Corrupt
>>Practices' (GACP) - our own home-grown version of GAAP :-)
>>
>>It come to such a pass, that parents of eligible brides  often seek
>>officials from GMC or ASEB or other places for grooms who have
>>'bhira poisa ase nohoi'.
>>
>>So, unless people's attitude towards corruption is changed, yes
>>nothing is going to happen. Its not enough for people to be
>>complacent and keep saying they are helpless.
>>
>>--Ram
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>  >From: Chan Mahanta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>  >To: [email protected]
>>  >Subject: [Assam] The  meek shall be homeless -II
>>  >Date: Sun, 24 Apr 2005 09:42:26 -0500
>>  >
>>  >I looked for the author's promised recommendations on how to fix
>>the
>>  >'problem/s'.
>>  >
>>  >I did not find any. Of course I am disappointed.
>>  >
>>  >DNB has merely repeated the litany of complaints of the people
>>of
>>  >Assam that has been going on for decades now. His recommendation
>>to
>>  >the people to rise against what ails Assam is a day late and a
>>  >dollar short. Others saw the handwriting on the wall much
>>earlier.
>>  >And some realized that nothing would change unless Assam wrested
>>the
>>  >powers to take care of itself from a remote Center and took to
>>arms.
>>  >
>>  >DNB is right about only one thing: That nothing would change
>>unless
>>  >the people RISE. Question is how? What kind of rising will do
>>the
>>  >job? Hartals, gheraos, bandhs, physical uttom-modhyom to the
>>  >perceived guilty, marching on the lax judges that fail to
>>convict
>>  >anyone, writing news-paper editorials excoriating the nations
>>top
>>  >law-enforcement agency, the CBI, for failing to get convictions
>>more
>>  >than the pathetic 8%, or abolish Assam police whose conviction
>>rate
>>  >is probably even less? What?
>>  >
>>  >Or maybe he should have  been more explicit and told the people
>>of
>>  >Assam to get more moral?
>>  >
>>  >In a functional constitutional democracy, there are built in
>>  >mechanisms with which the people can correct the course of its
>>  >governance.Fix what is broken, amend what needs improving, so on
>>and
>>  >so forth.  DNB realizes, like many before him already did, that
>>such
>>  >constitutional, peaceful means do not work in Indian democracy.
>>For
>>  >if they did, if they could be counted upon for the people to
>>rely
>>  >on, he would have cited them, would have pointed the uninformed
>>to
>>  >the tools available which they ought to use.
>>  >
>>  >Did he? Could he?
>>  >
>>  >Can Assam Netters fill in and supply what DNB missed?
>>  >
>>  >Too bad it was yet another exercise in running in circles,
>>leading
>>  >to nowhere.
>>  >What I wonder about is whether it is a self inflicted condition
>>or a
>>  >genuine
>>  >unawareness born out of never having seen any better.
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >
>>  >The  meek shall be homeless -II
>>  >WITH  EYES WIDE OPEN
>>  >
>>  >D. N.  Bezboruah
>>  >Last  week I had ended by saying that if we let the anti-social
>>and
>>  >criminal elements in our society have their way for ten more  
>>years
>>  >they will dispossess all law-abiding citizens of their  hearths
>>and
>>  >homes and banish the law for good. I was perhaps  wrong about
>>the
>>  >ten years. Having started the process of selling  Assam to
>>  >Bangladesh already, they are in a tearing hurry to quit  the
>>scene
>>  >of their treachery and disappear before anyone can get  to them.
>>So
>>  >the process may take much less than we imagine.
>>  >
>>  >The first thing  to bear in mind is that Assam is too full of
>>people
>>  >who cannot  make a decent living out of their education, their
>>  >skills or  their wits. They certainly cannot make a living out
>>of
>>  >their manual labour. This is not to say that everyone here falls
>>in
>>  >that category. What I wish to convey is that a majority of the
>>  >people who are in politics or in any kind of political  
>>management
>>  >belong to this class who must make a living out of crooked
>>practices
>>  >alone. The only problem is they think that  this is what
>>politics is
>>  >all about. So they sincerely believe  that hoodwinking the
>>people
>>  >and living off them like overgrown  parasites is perfectly
>>  >legitimate activity in a democratic  society. And therein lies
>>the
>>  >danger to the law-abiding citizen.  So if we do not have our
>>eyes
>>  >wide open to look into our tomorrows, we are going to be
>>outwitted
>>  >by people who are less educated, less honest and less
>>industrious
>>  >than we are. And they  are going to win against good people
>>because
>>  >they are more  determined, more united in crime and far more
>>  >desperate. They  have nothing else to depend on except their
>>  >crookedness.
>>  >
>>  >There are  umpteen organizations that we can take up as examples
>>to
>>  >show  how the crooked have always managed to defraud the honest
>>and
>>  >the law-abiding citizens. For the time being, we shall look at  
>>just
>>  >two of them (or what were two organizations but have become  six
>>  >now). One is the Guwahati Municipal Corporation (GMC) and  the
>>other
>>  >the former Assam State Electricity Board (ASEB) that  has now
>>been
>>  >broken up into five organizations, the names of  which I cannot
>>  >remember. I do not have to tell anyone that the  GMC is not
>>exactly
>>  >an organization full of saintly souls. Had it  been so, the
>>  >commercial wards of Fancy Bazar, Pan Bazar and  Athgaon would
>>not
>>  >have managed to get away with paying a  fraction of the
>>municipal
>>  >taxes that they owe to the GMC, they would not have managed to
>>get
>>  >by on the old absurd rates even  after increasing the size of
>>their
>>  >holdings several times, they  would not have managed to flout
>>all
>>  >the building bye-laws and  they would not have escaped
>>punishment
>>  >for regularly pumping  water from the water mains. We know all
>>these
>>  >activities that  cause severe losses to the GMC are possible
>>because
>>  >there are  more people within the GMC who think of their own
>>pockets
>>  >before  they think of the GMC that has employed them. I salute
>>the
>>  >minority in the GMC who can claim, hand on heart, that they are  
>>not
>>  >guilty, but I maintain that they have been undone by too  many
>>  >errant brothers. The GMC also has hundreds of conservancy staff
>>who
>>  >have drawn their salaries for years without doing any  work at
>>all.
>>  >They have even managed to increase their salaries  and
>>allowances.
>>  >And because they do not work and because the  garbage of the
>>city
>>  >must be cleaned, the GMC has had to entrust  the task of garbage
>>  >clearance to contractors who must be paid  separately even
>>though
>>  >the GMC is already paying its conservancy  staff. This is an
>>  >anti-national crime on the part of both the  conservancy staff
>>who
>>  >draw their salaries without working as  well on the part of the
>>  >officers who allow this to happen. And  in a democracy, an
>>  >anti-national crime is an anti-people crime.  In other words,
>>those
>>  >guilty of this crime are enemies of the  people. And what are
>>these
>>  >enemies of the people up to now? They  are very anxious to get
>>all
>>  >the Asian Development Bank and World  Bank development loans
>>that
>>  >are being extended to the GMC. But  they have no intentions of
>>  >treating these loans as loans. They would rather treat them as
>>  >grants and siphon out whatever is possible into their own
>>coffers.
>>  >But the ADB and the WB are not  as lenient customers as the
>>Central
>>  >Government. They know how to arm-twist beneficiaries into
>>returning
>>  >loans. And when this  happens, the GMC will start hiking taxes
>>  >eight, nine or even ten  times for no development work
>>whatsoever.
>>  >Middle-class taxpayers  will be in no position to pay such taxes
>>  >(and should not pay  such taxes to subsidize pay without work)
>>and
>>  >will soon find  that they will have to sell their property to
>>pay
>>  >municipal  taxes! And those who have always got away with paying
>>a
>>  >fraction  of their legitimate taxes will be the ones to buy up
>>such
>>  >property. This is the scenario that stares us in the face unless
>>  we
>>  >wake up now to prevent what is on the agenda of the crooked  
>>ones.
>>  >We must insist on the dismissal of those who draw salaries  
>>without
>>  >work and the proper calculation and collection of taxes  in the
>>  >commercial wards of the city before there can be any talk  of
>>hiking
>>  >taxes. We must collectively challenge unfair tax hikes  in court
>>and
>>  >carry out a crusade against such tax hikes to  subsidize payment
>>of
>>  >salaries without work. Incidentally, all  political parties of
>>the
>>  >State will call such a crusade the handiwork of the Left, but
>>that
>>  >should not worry anyone because  this is really just a complaint
>>  >about the opportunities for easy  money at the cost of the
>>Assamese
>>  >that would seem to have eluded  them.
>>  >
>>  >Then there is the Assam State  Electricity Board (ASEB) or
>>rather
>>  >its five new avatars. The  installed capacity of the ASEB was
>>514
>>  >MW, and at one time the  ASEB had about 24,000 employees. Over
>>46
>>  >employees per MW of  electricity generated and distributed must
>>be a
>>  >sort of record  fit for the Guinness Book of World Records. But
>>  >today the new avatars of the ASEB generate less than 120 MW.
>>True,
>>  >the  number of employees has come down to about 17,000. But the
>>  >number of employees per MW generated has gone up to a more  
>>adverse
>>  >141.66 or so. And what is the Assam Electricity  Regulatory
>>  >Commission (AERC) planning to do now? Why, it now  envisages a
>>16
>>  >per cent return on equity for the new  transmission companies of
>>the
>>  >ASEB. And yet, it was the same  AERC that had turned down an
>>appeal
>>  >made by the ASEB for a three  per cent return on equity made in
>>the
>>  >year 2002-03! What happens  to the consumer? He ends up paying
>>an
>>  >increase of almost 50 per  cent on power tariff. And he is being
>>  >expected to do this when he knows that ministers in a democracy
>>are
>>  >getting free power, bureaucrats and officers getting away with
>>  >paying a ridiculous pittance for the current they consume and a
>>  >whole lot of power thieves are just stealing power. Some years
>>ago,
>>  >I did a report  on power theft by two companies of Amingaon to
>>the
>>  >tune of Rs 2  crore. The senior officer of the ASEB who helped
>>with
>>  >this power  theft was rewarded with a promotion just before he
>>  >retired! And  who is meekly subsidizing all this theft of power
>>and
>>  >the  totally redundant number of employees? The meek,
>>unquestioning
>>  >bill-payers of course. It is the honest, regular bill-payers who
>>  >end up paying for all the aberrations of the system and for
>>everyone
>>  >who gets electricity free or steals it. Should the  law-abiding
>>  >citizens not rise in protest to end such injustice  and loot of
>>  >power? They may choose to be as unheeding as they  have been in
>>the
>>  >past. But in that case they are all working  actively for their
>>own
>>  >funerals, and have no one else to blame.
>>  >_______________________________________________
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