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July
3, 2001
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Why
do civil servants oblige politicians on the rampage?
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Another
emergency
EVERYONE
had suspected that former Tamil Nadu chief minister M. Karunanidhi
and his family would be hauled over the coals once Jayalalitha came
to power. But even her most ardent supporters could not have imagined
that she would go berserk. Although settling personal scores is
nothing new in the country and the Haryana culture is spreading
dangerously, it has never been done as crudely as it was this weekend
in Tamil Nadu. Even Bihar, which is considered the worst example,
looks civilised in comparison.
The manner in which 78-year-old Karunanidhi was arrested and dragged
away by the police a little after midnight was appalling. Union
minister Murasoli Maran, a heart patient, was roughed up so badly
that he had to be rushed to hospital. Some other relatives of Karunanidhi
faced more or less the same treatment. And poor former chief secretary
Nambiar was also whisked away.
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Jayalalitha’s
action is indicative of the dubious methods politicians use
to perpetuate their rule. It would be a mockery of democracy
if she got away with it
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All
this has been done at the specific instructions of the chief minister
who, mind you, has been convicted on charges of corruption and who
has been debarred by the Election Commission from contesting elections
because of that. There is no doubt about her vendetta and the deliberate
misuse of official machinery. This is not governance, it is a mafia
operation.
What does all this add up to? Is Tamil Nadu a personal fiefdom of
Jayalalitha? Can a chief minister break any law, violate any norm
and cross any limits to take revenge on a political opponent? Has
the Centre, which is supposed to safeguard the letter and spirit
of the Constitution, no duty towards guarding a system which upholds
the individual’s rights and guarantees the rule of law. What is
the remedy when even Union Law Minister Arun Jaitley says that Maran
and the other minister, T.R. Baalu, have been detained illegally?
Does it mean that a Union minister can be arraigned by the state
at its whims and fancies? How can the country function if states
overstep their power and arrogate to themselves the authority which
they do not possess? Just because a state government has the police
under it, it does not mean that its chief minister can run amuck.
The Centre, which represents the nation, cannot look powerless or
helpless.
The state governor, a former Supreme Court judge, had neither enhanced
the dignity of her office, nor of the law, when she appointed Jayalalitha
as chief minister. It was incumbent upon her to upbraid Jayalalitha
for taking the law into her own hands. But she did little and sent
a report to cover up Jayalalitha’s dictatorial acts. The governor’s
explanation that the arrest of 23,000 DMK workers worked out to
only 1 per cent of the state’s population is too ludicrous to be
even funny. Her recall was the minimum that the Centre could have
recommended.
Whether Karunanidhi is guilty or not, it is for the court to decide.
The state has to follow certain norms. The entire process cannot
be completed, from the levelling of charges to the actual arrest,
within a few hours. When Jayalalitha was arrested on charges of
corruption, the set procedure was gone through. The entire exercise
took more than a year. There was no midnight knock and the police
did not push her into a car. Nor was there use of force. Mediapersons
were not arrested on false charges.
I can understand, if not appreciate, that Jayalalitha’s action is
a silly kind of catharsis of anger welling up within her from the
time the Karunanidhi government booked her for corruption. But I
cannot make out why the police, under Karunanidhi till yesterday,
behaved as if they were Nadir Shah’s force. The explanation that
they did it in self-defence does not wash. The Centre should have
the gumption to take action against IPS officers supervising the
force.
Yet the larger question remains: why do public functionaries, particularly
the police, behave in the manner in which they did? Are they only
an instrument of tyranny in the hands of a ruler? IAS and IPS officers
can at best be transferred from their positions. Why have the personnel
of the two services become errand boys of chief ministers?
It is a question that was asked during and after the Emergency.
Not that it has irked their conscience. The Shah Commission, which
went into the excesses during the Emergency, came to the conclusion
that ethical considerations inherent in public behaviour became
generally dim and in many cases beyond the mental grasp of many
of the public functionaries. The desire for self-preservation became
the sole motivation for their official actions and behaviour. The
anxiety to survive at any cost was so pervasive that most public
servants acted as willing tools of tyranny.
True, some chief ministers are so autocratic that they brook no
opposition. Officers taking exception to defective orders are transferred
or punished through false allegations against them. But if the civil
service, which is the country’s sheet anchor, becomes malleable,
what happens to the system they are supposed to run? Their desire
for survival or to go up the ladder by any method comes in handy
to rulers like Jayalalitha. No rule or regulation to strengthen
the hands of public servants can be of any use if they themselves
do not harbour a commitment to fairplay and justice.
Political behaviour is also important. Jayalalitha’s allies, the
Congress, the communists, the TMC and the PMK, are embarrassed.
They are also critical of the treatment meted out to Karunanidhi.
But their criticism lacks the sharpness and the persistence it should
have. In fact, Jayalalitha’s do-not-care attitude should make them
and other political parties think of ways to put an end to political
vendetta. It is not only a question of changing political culture
but also of a belief that wrong means will not lead to right results.
Jayalalitha’s action is indicative of the dubious methods political
leaders are using to perpetuate their rule. Article 356 is no remedy
because the ruling parties at the Centre are no angels and have
never been so. They have wrongly used the right to dismiss state
governments in the name of defending the Constitution. Yet it would
be a mockery of democracy if Jayalalitha got away with this.
Perhaps the Centre should seriously think of the ombudsman institution
to take up cases where chief ministers or Central ministers have
violated values or norms in their governance. What hurts me is the
contempt rulers like Jayalalitha have for morality. Such an attitude
not only ignores something that is basic in man but also deprives
human behaviour of standards and values.
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