Updated On: 21 August, 2011 07:49 AM IST | | Samrat
Dalit intellectuals, according to a news report, are among the critics of Anna Hazare and the movement he is leading.
Dalit intellectuals, according to a news report, are among the critics of Anna Hazare and the movement he is leading. They find his movement "casteist" and "against representative democracy". It is difficult to understand how a movement for a less corrupt government might be construed as casteist, but then, to Dalit thinkers, everything is about caste, just as, to a Freudian, everything is about sex. You show a Freudian a pen and he will think it's a penis.
Everyone's crying for help: A supporter of Anna Hazare at a public
hunger strike at Ramlila grounds in New Delhi on Friday. Pic/Subhash
Barolia
Corruption undoubtedly affects all castes. It also affects the poorer and weaker sections of society more directly. A privileged person can afford a bribe. The poor often have to suffer because they can't pay up.
Considering that Dalits and tribals are as groups, worse off than high castes, it would be sensible on the part of Dalits and tribals to support any movement against corruption.
The Dalit thinkers who have opposed Anna and the Jan Lokpal Bill do, however, have a point. Chandrabhan Prasad's warning that "vesting so much power in the Lokpal, a non-elected person, could lead to a dangerous situation", is valid. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said as much. He is currently in the public's doghouse, but on this, he is right.
In this country, every inspector of every kind becomes an extortionist. From the building inspector to the customs inspector to the police inspector to even the CBI inspector, all misuse their powers to collect bribes.
Those agitating for the Jan Lokpal Bill say as much. In fact, they believe judges and ministers up to the Prime Minister are prone to corruption.
I have a couple of questions for them. From which society will they get the staff for their Lokpal Police? Will their staff comprise entirely of incorruptible Gandhians for all time to come? If their organisation is going to be peopled, in the end, by the same folks who today fill our police forces and bureaucracy, then it is unlikely that it will be radically different. The words of caution are therefore not entirely out of place.
Samrat is the Editor of Daily Post and author of The Urban Jungle. The views expressed in this column are the individual's and don't necessarily represent those of the paper