http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/the-newspaper/columnists/14-i-a-rehman-a-corrupted-debate-zj-01

A corrupted debate 
By I.A. Rehman 
Thursday, 10 Dec, 2009 

The ongoing debate on accountability is not free from the fundamental flaw that 
often mars public discourse in Pakistan, in that the entire emphasis is on 
symptoms of wrongdoing by persons in authority, holders of political or 
bureaucratic or judicial offices. 

Little is being said about the causes and factors that make corruption 
possible. The result, as usual in such exercises, will be that a few heads may 
roll while the cancer of corruption will continue to spread to as yet 
unaffected parts of the state - if any part can be claimed to have remained 
unaffected.

As the discussion gets more and more unedifying, one begins to doubt that 
corruption is being seriously debated because the targets are persons presumed 
to be corrupt and not the many facets of corruption. This raises doubts about 
the motives of the anti-corruption brigade - whether it wants to chop off a few 
of the crowns of the hydra-headed monster of corruption or whether it has 
decided to kill the monster itself. Sometimes outbursts on corruption in high 
places cannot be accepted as serious debate, they sound more like underworld 
brawls.

Quite a few persons in authority have also contributed to the decline in the 
quality of arguments. For instance, the plea that no NRO beneficiary should 
quit his ministerial gaddi until he is convicted by a court (after a trial that 
may continue longer than the honourable fellow's term in office) is not worth 
uttering in a decent society. 

Obviously some people have not heard of the adage that Caesar's wife has to be 
above suspicion nor of the modern-day dictum penned by Sir Ivor Jennings (who, 
incidentally, tried to guide Pakistan's first constitution-makers) in the 
following words:

'The most elementary qualification demanded of a minister is honesty and 
incorruptibility. It is, however, necessary not only that he should possess 
this qualification but also that he should appear to possess it.'

The key word in the quotation is incorruptibility. That is the criterion by 
which ministers ought to be judged and not by actions done while holding office 
or before assuming or after quitting an official position. The duty of 
ministers suspected of wrongdoing is not debatable; it is a settled matter. 

The issue of central importance in the whole discussion about corruption or 
accountability is the increase in corruption despite six decades of efforts to 
eradicate it. The Anti-Corruption Act, which one believes is still on our 
statute book, was passed five months before Pakistan came into being. 
Provisions regarding the liability of public servants found in possession of 
property disproportionate to their legitimate earnings were added to it more 
than 50 years ago. And anti-corruption measures have been announced by all 
regimes.

The Public Representative Offices Disqualification Act was adopted soon after 
independence and it was invoked against two chief ministers before it was 
denounced as incompatible with democratic politics in 1954.

Ayub Khan devised EBDO to send politicians home and used martial law cover to 
purge the bureaucracy of bad eggs (of the regime's choice). The charge-sheets 
against the condemned politicians and civil servants show many of them as 
harmless sparrows compared to the latter-day sharks.

Yahya Khan, Bhutto, Ziaul Haq and Musharraf all tried their hand at throwing 
out politicians and bureaucrats on charges of corruption and yet corruption has 
increased at a galloping pace and Pakistan has continued to climb higher and 
higher in the list of the world's most corrupt states. What is to be done about 
this? It is obvious that axing a few more politicians and bureaucrats, however 
necessary, will not help. It has not helped in the past and it is not going to 
help in the future.

Some of the institutional weaknesses in the anti-corruption plans have long 
been identified. For instance, there is no doubt that the drive against 
corruption has suffered due to its control being vested in the executive. Since 
all papers, evidence and proof is with the establishment it abuses its powers 
to prosecute political or personal rivals and covers up the tracks of its 
favourites. 

This applies to all watchdogs - from the Anti-Corruption Establishment to the 
National Accountability Bureau. Thus, anybody who wishes to fight corruption 
should be demanding (once again) an accountability mechanism outside and 
independent of the executive.

Secondly, it has been accepted since the days of Fulton and Cornelius that 
neither politician nor bureaucrat should have discretionary powers. When will 
this principle become the rule in Pakistan? In a country where everybody from 
the head of state to a petty assistant considers discretionary powers a matter 
of life and death freedom for discretion is problematic.

Thirdly, there is total consensus on the fact that corruption and secret 
government go hand in hand. Transparent governance and complete respect for the 
people's right to know are essential pre-requisites to fair and honest 
management of public affairs. Is any progress being made towards these goals?

One curious feature of the current discussion on corruption is the absence of 
any reference to legalised corruption. Nobody includes land grants to public 
servants, allotment of residential/commercial plots to all and sundry, 
post-retirement perks, issuance of short-term SROs and loans to the infant 
children of the high and mighty in the list of corrupt deeds though they 
manifestly fall in that category. What is conveniently forgotten is the fact 
that legalised corruption has emboldened many to indulge in what is still 
considered illegal conduct.

Above all, it is time to take a hard look at the corruption of the system. Let 
the campaign against individual culprits continue but attention must not be 
diverted from the fact that a corrupt system causes incalculably greater harm 
to the people and the state than corrupt individuals.

Colonialism, fascism, dictatorship and theocracy are corrupt systems. No good 
can ever come out of these systems even if their guiding lights are austere and 
untainted by personal misconduct. An open, democratic government is still the 
best polity even if its leaders are less austere and less capable than 
non-political experts or praetorian guards. A democratic system has its own 
corrective mechanisms - parliamentary oversight and reference to the people - 
and all attempts to summon extra-democratic arbitrators (these are easily 
identifiable in Pakistan) will corrupt the anti-corruption debate itself.

PS. Yesterday Pakistan joined comparable states in celebrating Anti-Corruption 
Day. Ha ha!


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