Title: Re: [Assam] Another One from Tehelka
At 3:05 AM -0500 5/21/05, Barua25 wrote:
I donot think this report may be called journalism at all. It is simply one Indian making noise against another India. Journalism should present bold facts and figures, not simple statements that there are facts. The reporter writes"
 
> All these swindles have been well documented and written about but
> none of the culprits has been taken to task


*** Huh?


 
Show us where and what documents and who are these culprits that went free, not simple statements.


*** Are you suggesting LoC did not happen, or all the other scams that have been widely reported ( that is what 'documented' means in this context, not court papers or transcripts of police records or transcripts of evidence) have not happened, or could not be demonstrated that they happened?


Please give us a break.

*** Got tired of investigative journalism already Rajen :-)? By all accounts, Tehelka is India's most well known and respected IJ org. I thought you advocated IJ along with NGOs as the saviour for India's dysfunctional govt. system. Can't handle the IJ heat generated by Tehelka?
Tsk, tsk!

What kind of IJ did you have in mind to help hold Indian Govt's. feet to the fire?


We donot need any more noise.
Either give us VOICE
or give us MUSIC.
Not dumb menaingless NOISE.
'Silence Please'

*** Eh, ki kolahe' Rajen. Khongei uthil-neki akou he' twmar ( What Rajen, did you get angry again already?) :-).

c






Rajen Barua
 
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chan Mahanta" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <assam@pikespeak.uccs.edu>
Sent: Friday, May 20, 2005 4:21 PM
Subject: [Assam] Another One from Tehelka

> This story, as incomplete a picture  as it is, does point to certain
> issues that are often overlooked by some of our friends here in Assam
> Net for example, and by most Indians. To get a better understanding
> of how and why exactly these can take place and with such impunity
> one needs to read Sanjib Baruah's book DURABLE DISORDER,
> Understanding the Politics of Northeast India, which I have started
> reading, finally.
>
> cm
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Scam as scam can
>
> Corruption prospers in the Northeast because it bothers so few
>
>   By  Nitin A. Gokhale
>
> The eight states of the Northeast may be unique in most respects but
> when it comes to big-time financial scams, the region is no different
> than the rest of India: Politicians, bureaucrats and businessmen gang
> up to rob the exchequer of big amounts in the Northeast as they do
> across the country. For scamsters in the region the colour of money
> is same as in any part of India. There is, however, one unique thing
> about scams in the Northeast - no one is unduly perturbed, no one
> gets punished and all is forgotten with time.
>
> Being outside the radar screens of New Delhi, most corrupt practices
> and big-time scams in the Northeast
>   go unnoticed and unreported
> Financial irregularities, running into hundreds of crores of rupees,
> have been uncovered in the region more frequently than anywhere else.
> The Rs 300-crore lottery scandal in Nagaland; the Rs 250-crore import
> of palmoline oil scandal; the Rs 197-crore power department scam or
> the latest Rs 100-crore fci supply scam, the list is endless. Those
> in the know have even coined a term for these scandals. They are
> called the 60:40 scandals.
>
>   This is how they work. The well-informed bureaucrat proposes a
> scheme, the politician endorses it and the ubiquitous businessman
> implements it - all on paper! Then the spoils are shared 60:40 - 30
> percent each goes to the politician and the bureaucrat and the rest
> is pocketed by the trader.
>
>   All these swindles have been well documented and written about but
> none of the culprits has been taken to task. Many of them continue to
> be active and flourishing politicians or bureaucrats. Businessmen,
> under the patronage of the politician-bureaucrat nexus, carry on
> defrauding governments in the Northeast with impunity. If any of
> these scandals had taken place in the so-called mainland India,
> someone would have made a song and dance - the opposition, the media,
> civil society groups.
>
> But India's Northeast appears immune to any of these reactions to
> big-time scams. Mainly because, like with most other aspects of
> governance, the region suffers from the 'out-of-sight-out-of-mind'
> syndrome. Being outside the radar screens of New Delhi, most corrupt
> practices that take place in the Northeast go unnoticed and
> unreported. In some cases, the watchdogs in Delhi get co-opted. The
> Opposition in the state does not raise a voice since its members have
> shared the loot during their time in power. The media, in most
> Northeast states is weak, dependent, with a few exceptions, upon
> government largesse and therefore subservient. Given the combination
> of these factors, no one should be surprised that big-ticket
> financial scams in the Northeast get a decent burial after creating a
> few ripples.
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