Tuesday, January 12, 2010

MSSRF

Dear Ms. SriVidya,
You’ve done an excellent coverage on the community based initiative of MSSRF recently in the Hindu newspaper. The MSSRF seems to have taken a lot of strain on finding solutions to the perennial problems of poor people engaged not only in inland farming but also in sea-fishing on the costal zones. The IGNOU too seems to have entered this arena with a view to supporting the community college and making it a component of the integrated Coastal Zone Management of MSSRF. The participation of Ms. Kanimozhi, Rajya Saba M.P. will ensure the whole-hearted support of the state government. The opening of a training institute for the fishermen under the aegis of MSSRF will certainly add one more ground for the activity of MSSRF. The Village Resource Centers and the Village Knowledge Centers are indeed to be watched and replicated in other parts of the country. I wish you closely monitor these concepts and practices at least for 1-2 years on a quarterly basis and report on its feasibility and adaptability.

Note: This letter is sent to the newspaper 'The Hindu'

Monday, January 11, 2010

Will anything change?

Dear Ms. Kalpana Sharma,
I read your article on ‘Will anything change?’ in the Hindu dated 27th December 2009. It is true “for millions of Indians there is little cause to cheer”. Millions who live in poverty-stricken villages will continue to be poor and become poorer unless and until some realistic policies framed and circulated by governments in the National capital and State capitals are sincerely implemented by the so-called permanent executives posted in the district head-quarters and block development head-quarters. The latest headache to the villagers is the hydra-headed monster in the form of SEZ to snatch farm lands from the farmers and make the rich richer and allow the MNCs to flourish and loot in the name of ‘development’.

Note: This letter sent to the newspaper 'The Hindu'

Friday, January 8, 2010

Golden Chance for the Golden Age in India

Telengana episode has effected a rupture on Indian Polity and caused a painful turmoil all over. The latent desire and desperate demand for separate statehood in different locations has erupted with a sudden spurt compelling the Congress party in the Centre to go slow on the same within 24 hours of its initial announcement. How to contain such a development is the major concern of all the right-thinking individuals and well-wishers in the country. Intelligent humans, as we are, should convert such an event into a positive chance for a better arrangement in the given democratic system. Language, the only major criterion for the reorganization of states in the post-independent era in 1950s, remains no more a lone valid and solid base for the purpose. Economic development and, that too a balanced regional development has become the need of the hour. Divisive and decisive forces such as language, caste, colour or creed could hardly be a base for geographical divisions any more.

India is a country of one billion plus in population. Geographical area-wise and population-wise it can easily afford to have 40 to 50 states in all – each containing or catering to a population of 20 millions plus. The only rider is that it should be a Democratic Federation with the Presidential form of government as in the case of USA. The President and the Governors in the states should be directly elected for a term of 5-6 years with each incumbent allowed to serve only 2 terms in office and necessarily not succeeded by a close relative in the posts for at least 2 terms at a stretch. Under such a scenario, the elected executives would be assisted and advised by a group of experts as ministers (mostly nominated) numbering not more than 5 in each government. Departmental activities should be guided, budgeted and monitored by the advisory committees comprising members of the Parliament or State Assemblies as the case may be. Direct election would be conducted once in 5 – 6 years only for the lowest chamber via. Village Panchayats and Municipal bodies and also for the highest executive post in the country viz. President and in the states viz. the Governors. All other legislative bodies viz. the Janpad Panchayats, District Panchayats, Municipal Councils/Corporations, State Assemblies and the National Parliament should have selected/nominated members with proven talent and experience from among them on the basis of internal elections. No public representative elected or nominated can hold any particular office for more than two terms. In other words it would inject fresh blood into each chamber of public representatives. Direct election to the posts of President and Governors and similarly to the lowest chambers should be conducted at the Government cost.

Only two or three dominant political parties (on the basis of immediately-preceding General Elections) should be allowed to field candidates for the post of President and Governors but the elections or nominations to all other posts and chambers need not necessarily be in the name and nomination of political parties. All the ills of electoral processes can be automatically tackled without any major costs – neither to the Government nor to the candidates. No favoritism, no nepotism, no dynastic tendency, no black-money and no muscle power would be able to raise their ugly heads in such a system.

It is indeed a golden chance coming on our way for ensuring a golden era in Indian Sub-continent. Telengana, Gorkhaland, Vidarbha, Bundelkland, etc. etc. can await the recommendations of a newly-formed State Reorganization Commission in the next 2 years. As a saying goes, one should strike when the iron is hot. Let us convert the current malady into a remedy. Sixty years of Parliamentary Democracy needs a re-look and re-working. So the current Parliament can easily be converted into a Second Constituent Assembly for the debate and a decision on an alternative system of governance like the Presidential form of Government. A federal polity with such contrast situations, languages, cultures and civilizations, heritages and histories in India needs immediate political and constitutional reforms to halt the riches of a few, to promote the welfare of all the citizens, to make justice available at a cheaper cost, to eradicate or substantially control the electoral fraud and bad practices, to provide corruption-free public services from government functionaries, to check the erosion of dignity of labour but improve and sustain its productivity be it on agri-farms, in factories, in public and semi-public offices, to halt the mobocracy and encourage meritocracy in every sphere of public life.

Note: This article is sent to all major Newspapers, Magazines, Political parties, President, Prime minister, Chief ministers of all the states, Election Commission, all Governors, Chief Justice of India, Judges of Supreme Court, Chief Justices of States, Chief Secretaries of all states, LBS Directors, etc.