Padma award (The highest Civilian Award of India) either as honour or 
consolation prize?

 
 
India's highest civilian awards - the Padma awards - have had a 
controversy-ridden past, and have yet again sparked a debate this year.

The Olympic bronze winning boxers and wrestlers, who brought honour to the 
country for their heroics in Beijing, are disappointed after being ignored for 
the awards.
 

Questions are also being raised on whether actress Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and 
yesteryear actress Helen should have been given a Padma Shri in the same year.

People are now beginning to wonder whether the selection process is fair and 
why is there always so much of heartburn when one talks of these civilian 
honours?

The question that raised on CNN-IBN's Face The Nation was: Are Padma awards 
given to the most deserving people?
 

To try and answer the question on the panel of experts were: Billiards player 
Geet Sethi who has been honoured in the past with the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, 
the Padma Shri and the Arjuna Award; former bureaucrat K Subrahmanyam, who has 
refused Padma Award citing personal reasons; and singer Abhijeet..

At the beginning of the show a majority of 86 per cent who voted in, disagreed 
that the Padma awards were given to the most deserving people while a minority 
12 per cent agreed.

 
HONOUR THE COUNTRY TO BE HOUNURED

K Subrahmanyam kick-started the discussion by describing he had three careers. 
He was a civil servant, a strategic analyst and a journalist. However, he said 
accepting an award in any of the three capacities was unacceptable to him.

"In my view I should not accept an award from the Government in any of the 
capacities as that would compromise my independence visa-vis the state," he 
said.

When pointed out that the sign of a mature democracy is that success should be 
celebrated, Subrahmanyam agreed success should be celebrated, but objected to 
the principle of the state trying to judge and give awards.
 

"The awards should be given by the concerned groups, not the Government. If 
there is an award for sports, it should be given by sportsmen and if it's for 
an artiste, it should be given by artistes," he stated.
 

Many are questioning whether Aishwarya and Helen should have been given the 
Padma Shri award in the same year and is it justified to celebrate artisteesin 
a year which was full of heroes from all walks of life.
 

Abhijeet, while agreeing with Subrahmanyam, added that rather than giving the 
award to the artiste, it should be given to the people who are behind the 
artiste's success. He also said awards should be given in the national interest 
and not for a commercial purpose.
 




"I'm not objecting to any artistes getting a Padma award, but preference should 
always be given where the national interest lies and it should be seen what one 
has done for the nation before such awards are doled out," he said.

 
SELECTION COMMITTEE NOT QUALIFIED

Taking the debate further, Geet Sethi said it's very important for the 
Government to honour people in different fields and there was nothing wrong in 
honouring people across the spectrum of human endeavour.
 

"People striving to achieve excellence in different fields, be it Arts, Sience, 
Cinema or Sports – all deserve to be honoured," he said.

However, he agreed with Subrahmanyam that the state was not qualified to judge 
different aspects of human endeavour. He thought wherever there were people not 
from concerned disciplines involved, the element of bias will creep in.
 

Bringing the aspect of sports into the discussion, Sethi said the Olympic 
platform was the ultimate sporting platform for any sportsmen where Olympic 
bronze winners boxer Vijendra Singh and wrestler Sushil Kumar made the country 
proud. He further said the two sportsmen deserved the Padma award.
 

"These two sportsmen should have been definitely included in the list of Padma 
awardees," he said.

At this stage in the debate, Subrahmanyam came back to his point of awards 
being given by concerned bodies and said the group of policy makers and 
bureaucrats are not equipped to decide which artiste or sportsmen deserves the 
Padma award.

Subrahmanyam brushed aside the argument that if bureaucrats can make policies 
for the Government which runs the country, why can't they be trusted on judging 
who should and shouldn't get the award. He stuck to his point and disagreed 
saying policy making was a profession in itself and the awards should judged by 
professional bodies.
 

"I'm not against the awards, but the awards should be decided by a professional 
body, just like the Hollywood film awards are given by a professional body and 
not by the US government," he said.




 
PADMA AWARD, A CONSOLATION PRIZE?

With Helen and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan being given the award in the same year - 
at a time when the latter is at the peak of her career and the former has been 
away from cinema for many years - many people are beginning to think that it is 
either a question of finally being recognised or a question of too little too 
late.

Abhijeet decided not to comment on this and instead side-stepped the issue 
saying that while he thought both the actresses deserved the award, in a year 
when there were other greater achievements like at the Olympics as well as in 
the battle against terror, there were others who deserved the award more.
 

"Vijendra and Sushil are national heroes, they deserve the award more than 
anyone else," he said.

One of the signs of a mature democracy is the kind of people it is awarding.. 
With the kind of suspicion that surrounds the Padma awards, they sometimes 
cease to be important and lose their value.
 

However, Sethi said any award given by the Government will always be valued but 
what the state needs is a broad objective criteria, which should be made known 
to public. So, people are aware why a particular individual is being awarded.

"The Government needs to have a broad objective criteria, so people know why a 
person is being awarded. So, once and for all this issue can be put to rest," 
he said.
 

Nonetheless, Sethi concluded that the Padma awards were not given for success 
in any particular fields but for individual qualities, which need to be kept in 
perspective.

 
Are Padma awards given to the most deserving people?

Courtesy: CNN-IBN
 




 
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