After 1.5 years, RTI provided NREGS documents to Unnao residents 
   
  
  
  To read this posting in Hindi language, please click here
   
   
  After ten hearings at the Uttar Pradesh (UP) State Information Commission and 
1.5 years from first filing the Right to Information (RTI) application to seek 
documents related to National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS) in 
Miyaganj block of Unnao district in UP, the people of Miyaganj are finally 
relieved to get those documents pertinent to the NREGS work done in their 
block. 
  
   
   
  The RTI application asking for information (like muster rolls and measurement 
books) under the RTI Act, 2005, was filed on 4 December 2006 by Miyaganj block 
resident Yeshwant Rao at the local Block office. He received a reply after more 
than six months (June 2007) asking him to submit Rs. 1,58,400 (at an 
arbitrarily fixed rate of Rs. 2,400 per village panchayat for 66 panchayats of 
the Miyaganj Block).
  
   
   
  This followed a long battle in the State Information Commission of UP where 
after more than ten hearings ultimately an order was passed directing the Block 
officials to provide information free of cost. The people of Miyaganj finally 
started getting the documents on 6 April 2008.
  
   
   
  After a year and a half of struggle residents of Miyaganj Block of Unnao led 
by Asha Parivar local activists Yeshwant Rao and Virendra Singh, have been 
successful in obtaining documents related to implementation of NREGS in their 
Block.
  
   
   
  Now the people of Miyaganj block are going a step further. During 20-28 May 
2008, they will be conducting a social audit based on the information provided 
by the block authorities on NREGS implementation. The people will go to each 
one of the 66 village panchayats, document and verify the NREGS records 
themselves. Earlier similar social audits of NREGS have been conducted in 
Bharawan, Sandila and Behender Blocks of neighbouring district of Hardoi.
  
   
   
  Social Audit is a process where in an open meeting of the village physical 
verification of the records is done with the help of officials, people's 
representatives and the people. In fact, the citizens of the Gram Sabha are 
supposed to perform this audit. In addition to the verification of financial 
details it is also ensured that other provisions of the NREGA are being 
followed. 
   
  It is an opportunity for the people to evaluate the entire scheme and also 
determine the quality of development works in their village. In a new 
democratic culture building up in the country since the Right to Information 
Act has been implemented, it is a chance for citizens to intervene and check 
the rampant prevalent corruption and irregularities in the system.
  
  Also in February 2006, the Rural Development Department of the Andhra Pradesh 
Government had conducted the social audit of the Andhra Pradesh Rural 
Employment Guarantee Scheme which was being implemented under the NREGA which 
had come into force from 2 Februray 2006. 
  
   
   
  Andhra Pradesh was probably the first state in the country where such a 
process took place and the credit for this goes entirely to the then Principal 
Secretary of the Rural Development Department, K. Raju. It is normally unheard 
of that any government department would subject its performance to public 
scrutiny, especially a department dealing with development works where huge 
siphoning off of resources has become the norm rather than exception. Fake 
muster rolls are one of the biggest sources of corruption in this country. 
   
  "By mentioning fictitious names, names of upper caste people who never 
perform manual labour, names of people who have migrated to cities long time 
back, names of people who are too old to work or exaggerating the number of 
days of work for labourers who have performed work, it is a common practice to 
withdraw huge sums of money from the government exchequer. In addition to the 
abovementioned discrepancies, it might also be the case that the work being 
shown on paper was never actually performed. In Hardoi District of U.P., 
recently is was discovered that a canal was being de-silted on paper in 2004-05 
by using the funds of Bharawan Block Panchayat whereas the Irrigation 
Department had taken a decision five years back not to release water in this 
canal. Over Rs. 3 lakhs were embezzled in this instance" said Dr Sandeep 
Pandey, Ramon Magsaysay Awardee (2002) for emergent leadership and National 
Convener of National Alliance of People's Movements (NAPM).
  
   
  "However, if the initiative of social audit remains in the hands of the 
government or administration, there is a danger that ultimately it'll be 
subverted. How many cases of corruption do we know where an enquiry was set up 
and because the individuals who were conducting the investigation were from the 
same class of people as they were investigating, the results of such exercises 
did not yield the desired result and the matters were covered up? We would not 
like to see the social audit process currently being undertaken in A.P. to 
degenerate to a state where the social auditors develop vested interests shared 
with the people responsible for implementing the APREGS. Hence it is very 
important that the initiative of the social audit process remains in the hands 
of common people. The Gram Sabha is the appropriate body to conduct this 
exercise and not some externally chosen professionals" cautioned Dr Sandeep 
Pandey.
  
   
 

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