Sunday, 10 April 2011

No nepotism in selecting panel, says Anna Hazare


New Delhi:  Rejecting allegations of nepotism in the selection of the members of the civil society in the joint drafting committee for the Jan Lokpal Bill, social activist Anna Hazare said that people should not make a fuss about the composition of the committee. What mattered instead, according to Mr Hazare, was the need for experts on the panel for a proper and effective anti-corruption legislation.

"The committee is not permanent, it has been formed only for two months and we should not think that he or she is there or not there. We need experienced people because the law should be stringent, and law experts have been kept on it, and that was the whole reason I did not want to be on it," Anna Hazare told reporters here.

The Gandhian's statement came after yoga guru Baba Ramdev had on Saturday, criticised the civil society representation in the 10-member committee. Without taking names, he spoke of nepotism in the selection of the members, an accusation widely believed to be directed at co-chair of the committee, Shanti Bhushan and his advocate son Prashant Bhushan who is also in the body.

"I spoke to Kiran (Bedi) ji and will talk to Anna ji as people of the country are raising the issue that why nepotism has come in the five-member (civil society) committee which is representing the 121 crore population of the country," Baba Ramdev had said.

Playing down the controversy, RTI activist and Jan Lokpal Bill drafting committee member Arvind Kejriwal said that Baba had some misunderstanding which had been sorted out.


The government-civil society joint drafting committee came about after Mr Hazare went on a "fast-unto-death" on April 5 demanding that the government introduce a bill to tackle corruption immediately, and that politicians alone not be in charge of drafting that bill. The government agreed to most of his demands.
The veteran activist admitted that he could not fathom that the movement led by him would generate such a massive nationwide support.

"I had no idea this agitation would turn out to be as big as it did... and the nationwide support we got. I wanted to do it in Maharashtra but Kiran Bedi, Swami Agnivesh and Arvind Kejriwal insisted that I hold the fast-unto-death in New Delhi", said Mr Hazare.

It took the 72-year-old Gandhian almost 98 hours of fasting to accomplish every point of an agenda that seemed preposterously ambitious when the week began. Till India pitched in, expressing its solidarity with rallies around Mr Hazare's cause.

The government has agreed that the panel that will draft the Lokpal Bill will include five representatives of civil society, including Mr Hazare, and five ministers. Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee will be the Chairman of the panel; and former Law Minister Shanti Bhushan, who has been picked by Mr Hazare, will be the co-Chairman.
Union Law Minister Veerappa Moily, Home Minister P Chidambaram, Telecom Minister Kapil Sibal and Minister for Minority Affairs Salman Khursheed will be the other government representatives on the panel.

Besides Shanti Bhushan, those representing civil society on the panel will be Anna Hazare himself, eminent lawyer Prashant Bhushan, retired Supreme Court Judge Santosh Hegde and RTI activist Arvind Kejriwal.

In a statement, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh described the coming together of civil society and government on the Lokpal Bill issue as "a step that augurs well for democracy", saying it signifies the mutual resolve to combat corruption.

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