Unstoppable Indian
corruption – Are top leaders free to loot the nation?
-Dr. Abdul Ruff
__________________
Tamil Nadu CM Jayalalithaa’s illegal asset case to go to Supreme
Court!
It seems corruption with which India
has been afflicted badly for years of misrule could stay intact notwithstanding
all anti-corruption laws and powerful the anti-corruption movement led by Anna
Hazare and Arvind Kejriwal. It is primarily because the ruling dispensation of
India as well as top political parties and politicians promotes this evil as an
unwritten policy of Indian corporatist regime.
There is a concerted effort by
central government and corporate lords to weaken the Kejriwal’s AAP (Common man’s
Party) in Delhi state and obstruct his efforts to cleanse the Delhi polity by
containing the corrupt elements.
The governments and political
parties refuse to acknowledge that t rampant corruption they are promoting to
make wealth illegally harms the nation, hampers the life patterns of common
masses.
1.
Clean chit followed by neat hit
As a
crude jolt to ambitions of Jayalalithaa who, upon her acquittal in the historic
illegal assets case, retook the rein of Tamil Nadu as CM, Karnataka government
has decided to appeal in Supreme Court against the apparently faulty judgment
delivered by judge Kumaraswami of Karnataka High Court, acquitting her of all
charges.
Ending
three-week long suspense, Karnataka government on June 01 has decided to file
an appeal in the Supreme Court against acquittal of actress turned Tamil Nadu
Chief Minister Jayalalithaa and three others by Karnataka High Court in the
disproportionate assets case.
The
decision to challenge the 11 May verdict by Justice C R Kumaraswamy of the
Karnataka High Court was taken at a cabinet meeting after the advice by the
Special Public Prosecutor in the case B V Acharya and state Advocate General
Ravivarma Kumar as also the state Law Department.
The
Karnataka Law Minister Jayachandra said that Chief Minister has directed me to
file an appeal in the Supreme Court immediately. The Supreme Court had
specifically said Karnataka has stepped into the shoes of TN and it is the sole
prosecuting agency for all matters related to the disproportionate assets case,
he said. Replying to a query, he said Acharya will be the SPP in the case in
the apex court. He said the SPP appointed on the direction of the Supreme Court
had advised filing the appeal against the wrongful acquittal of Jayalalithaa
and three others and even the AG and law Secretary had concurred with it.
"And now the cabinet has decided to file the appeal," he said, adding
it was being done "legally on merit".
In the
11 May verdict that restored Chief Ministership and her right to contest elections
to her, Jayalalithaa was acquitted of "all charges" in the 19-year
old disproportionate assets case. Three other convicts, including her
close aide Sasikala Natarajan, were also given a clean chit by the High Court.
Acquitting
Jayalalithaa and three others of "all the charges leveled against
them", the single bench judge Justice Kumaraswamy, in his 919-page
judgment, had also quashed the order of the trial court relating to
confiscation of the properties both movable and immovable.
On
disproportionate assets, the judge had held that "it is relatively small.
In the instant case, the disproportionate asset is less than 10 per cent and it
is within permissible limit."
"The
percentage of disproportionate assets is 8.12 percent," the judge had
said. Her conviction last year meant
that she was automatically disqualified as a lawmaker, but can contest again
after her acquittal.
The High
Court had held that the judgment and findings recorded by the trial court
convicting her and three others suffers from infirmity and it is not
sustainable in law and so she was set free.
Public prosecutor B V Acharya found the judgment totally flawed with
faulty calculations to favor Jaya’s acquittal and advised Karnataka government
to appeal in Supreme Court.
In retrospect,
Special Trial Court Judge Michael D Cunha had on 27 September last held
Jayalalithaa and three others guilty of corruption and awarded four years jail
term, due to which she attracted disqualification as an MLA that divested her
of Chief Ministership. The judge had also slapped a fine of Rs 100 crore on
Jayalalithaa and Rs 10 crore each on three other convicts. Later, as a twist,
the Karnataka High Court in Ban galore on 11 May gave a clean chit to the
AIADMK chief and her three associates, clearing them of "all
charges" in the 19-year-old case, paving the way for return
of Jayalalithaa as Chief Minister.
Meanwhile,
John Michael Cunha, who as Special Judge of the trial court had convicted Tamil
Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa in a disproportionate assets case, has been
appointed as the Registrar General of the state High Court by the Karnataka
government. On September 27 last, Cunha had held Jayalalithaa and three others
guilty of corruption in the 19-year-old disproportionate assets case and sentenced them to four years in
prison and forfeiting her MLA position plus she
was disqualified under the Representation of the People Act from contesting
elections for a period of ten years—four years from the date of conviction and
six years thereafter.
However,
Jaya has got everything back with a faulty High Court judgment. Since her
conviction was overturned by the Karnataka High Court on May 11, the AIADMK
chief returned as Tamil Nadu Chief Minister for the fifth time on May 23.
The
Congress and the Karnataka government were apparently in two minds whether to
contest the High Court order or not. Apparently, the government too thought
itself as a non-stakeholder and didn’t want to earn the wrath of Jayalalithaa
and her party. What seems to have prevailed
over the initial reluctance of the Karnataka government is the all-round
opposition from the Congress. According to some reports, what seem to have
prompted the Karnataka government’s decision, after the initial reluctance, are
the signals from the corrupt Congress high command that promotes corruption as
its key policy. Some reports said
that Sonia Gandhi favored an appeal.
Although
none reported political reasons behind the Karnataka government’s dilly
dallying, it was obvious that the state Congress unit was soft on rich
Jayalalithaa, unlike Abdul Nasser Madani, a Kerala Muslim pundit, whom it wants
to keep in Bengaluru jail permanently mainly because he does not have crores to
bribe. (Pundit
Madani was earlier tortured in Coimbatore for 10 long years as a suspect in a
bomb blast before the court found him innocent and let him free, but after two
years Karnataka state police - presumably under instruction from Congress
central government - forcefully took him from home in Kollam, Kerala with help from
ruling Communist party. Recently the
Supreme Court granted bail on health ground as he has been suffering from
multiple problems, including his eye sight. However, Karnataka government got his bail
cancelled. Apparently Indian government with a possible
colonialist mindset is taking revenge against Muslims for no explicit reasons).
The
Karnataka government had a 90-day deadline to file the appeal.
2.
Another
swearing in
Ms Jayalalithaa was sworn in as
Chief Minister for fifth time on May 23, after an eight-month break that was
forced upon her when a court in Bengaluru found her guilty of amassing wealth
beyond her income during her first term in office two decades ago. The ruling AIADMK chief was arrested for
three weeks before getting bail from the Supreme Court. She appealed
against her conviction in the High Court and won her case this month. The case against her was originally filed in
1996. In 2003, the trial was moved to neighbouring Karnataka to ensure
that the politics of Tami Nadu would not influence the proceedings.
Assembly elections are due in
Tamil Nadu elections in less than a year. The choice before
Jayalalithaa and the AIADMK is to utilize their limited time in office to win
them on sympathy wave. Tamil Nadu can expect more pro-poor welfare measures,
fair-price initiatives, market interventions and big bang development
announcements to win voters’ attention. In fact, she has already begun that.
She does not want to give the DMK any chance of returning to power.
When
a trial court in Bangalore had found her guilty in September last year it had
led to a short period of imprisonment, disqualification as the Chief Minister,
and her disappearance from active public life for nearly eight months.
A fresh
legal challenge to 67-year old Jayalalithaa has come nine days after she made a
triumphant return as Chief Minister with O Panneerselvam making way for her
following acquittal by the High Court.
Ms Jayalalithaa, who has now to
win a seat in the state assembly within six months of being sworn in chief
minister, is contesting a by-election from Radhakrishnan Nagar constituency
later this month. Jaya asked the silting AIADMK MLA to quit enabling herself to
contest.
AIADMK's
bitter rival DMK had raised the pitch for filing the appeal against acquittal
while the original petitioner Subramanian Swamy had also said he would move the
Supreme Court if Karnataka does not challenge the High Court verdict. In a way,
Karnataka government has preempted both sources wanting to contest the
acquittal in the apex court.
Ms Jayalalithaa's arch rival,
former CM M Karunanidhi of the DMK who possibly thinks his time is up in
politics, said last week that the Karnataka government must file an appeal
against her acquittal. He said in a statement that the DMK too would file its
own appeal in the Supreme Court. In the national election last year, the DMK
did not win a single seat in Tamil Nadu. Ms Jayalalithaa's party, the AIADMK,
won 37 of the state's 39, to be the third largest party in the Lok Sabha,
(lower house of parliament) after the BJP and the Congress.
Senior Congress leader
P Chidambaram, an eminent lawyer himself at Supreme Court, backed Karnataka Special Public Prosecutor
B V Acharya's advice to file an appeal against the acquittal of Tamil
Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa in the disproportionate assets case.
His comments in support of appeal in the
apex court comes in the wake of Acharya and Advocate General Ravivarma
Kumar advising the state government to file an appeal against the
acquittal of Jayalalithaa, while the legal cell of ruling Congress in the
state advising against filing an appeal.
Opposition
parties in Tamil Nadu welcomed Karnataka government's decision to appeal
against Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa's acquittal in a disproportionate assets
case, with DMK terming it as the "right" step by the ruling Congress.
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) President M Karunanidhi, besides other leaders,
had been urging Karnataka government to appeal against Jayalalithaa's
acquittal. Tamil Nadu Congress Committee chief E V K S Elangovan lauded his
party-led government in Karnataka for "quickly deciding" on
approaching the apex court with an appeal before the 90-day deadline. In
his reaction, Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) founder S Ramadoss, who had written
to Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah asking his government to appeal
against Jayalalithaa's acquittal, said: "albeit a little delayed decision,
it is a welcome one." He said he had been insisting that the verdict had
"loopholes". Ramadoss said if Karnataka government had immediately
heeded to his demand, "at least Jayalalithaa becoming Chief Minister could
have been avoided" by trying to secure a stay against the High Court
verdict.
It
appears, the entire opposition tries to be united against Jayalalithaa, but BJP
seeking to increase its MLAs in the assembly poll, hasn't been unequivocal. The
party’s central leadership seems to have been sufficiently humored, but its
state president has been kept out. The BJP, which like Congress party also
promotes corruption, also hasn’t made any official statement against the
verdict even after the opposition pointed out the alleged errors, hinting at
the possibility of an alliance in the next general elections for more assembly
seats.
Final
justice
In
his order, the High Court judge had said that her unaccounted part was less
than 10 percent of the total income, which according to a Supreme Court order,
was permissible. Opposition parties such as the DMK and the PMK immediately
found gaping errors in the arithmetic that fixed the disproportionate income at
less than 10 percent. Once corrected, her unaccounted income would exceed the
10 percent limit by a mile, they pointed out. Acharya, as well as Subramanian
Swamy, the original complainant in the case, also advanced the same argument
and wanted an appeal against the verdict.
As the Congress government in
Karnataka has decided to appeal against the High Court verdict acquitting J
Jayalalithaa in a corruption case, which cleared the way for her comeback as
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister, Karnataka government appeal against the High Court
verdict in the Supreme Court is the logical development on the issue. The state government Advocate General
Ravivarma Kumar pointed out, had 90 days to decide on an appeal, but had done
so in about 20 days after the High Court verdict.
Both
Karunanidhi and Subramanian Swamy had made it clear that they would go to Supreme
Court if the Karnataka government didn’t.
The
Karnataka government’s decision to file an appeal against the acquittal of J
Jayalalithaa, whose PM dream during the parliamentary poll was crushed by
Narendra Modi, may not have surprised the ruling AIADMK and its supremo, but it
will certainly bring back the uncertainty over her political future.
Now
that this 18-year-old case will move again against Jayalalithaa, it won’t be an
easy ride for her. Buoyed by the acquittal, she was back in the office and was
moving fast with a number of welfare and development projects ahead of the
by-election she is planning to contest. The appeal, which will still take a few
days, may even affect her re-election and stint in the office. The Supreme Court is likely to stay the
faulty HC verdict.
More
trouble seems to be waiting for AIADMK supremo J Jayalalithaa. The
case was fit enough for appeal because the High Court verdict allegedly based
itself on wrong financial figures. It has been pointed out that the numbers and
the reason for her acquittal do not match. While the special public prosecutor
in the case, BV Acharya, who was re-inducted at the last minute, wanted the
government to go on appeal, the legal cell of the Congress unit in the state
opposed his suggestion.
Correcting
the figures without appropriately revising the judgment that was based on the
wrong figures wouldn’t have been sustainable. Since the HC couldn’t revise its
own judgment, there was no possibility of correcting the figures alone.
If
the final verdict goes against her, which is quite logical, the DMK opposition,
which is literally out of steam, will have some ammunition in the assembly
elections next year. Let that be and court needs not worry about that in the
delivery of justice to India which suffers owing to rampant corruption
affecting the life of common people.
Supreme
Court is expected to give a stay order on the High court judgment and proceed
with adjudication. Meanwhile reports suggest the highly influential
Jayalalithaa, who deliberately use uneducated poor party people as a political
shield, would also file a case in the Supreme Court but no details
available.
It
appears Jayalalithaa and the government of Karnataka, where Jayalalithaa
originally belongs, coordinated their steps with Jayalalithaa assuming office
of CM while Karnataka assembly beginning its session. Jayalalithaa knew before
hand about the assembly session and decided to be the CM and possibly coerced
the Congress government to delay the appeal so that she could be CM albeit for
a short period. Her thoroughness needs to be appreciated, however.
It is
also quite possible that judge Kumaraswami delivered a quick but faulty
judgment in order to help Jaya resume power and reacquire the right to
contest. Undoubtedly no one, lawyer or
judge, renders such a huge-huge service to billionaire Jayalalithaa for
free.
Obviously,
a person who powerfully influenced the High court and got all punishments
withdrawn is no ordinary manipulator.
Now the
focus is on the Supreme Court if it would stay the flawed HC order or let
Jayalalithaa enjoy her newly found chief ministership longer. Speculation, as
you say, is indeed thrilling.
One,
however, has to wait for the final judgment of Supreme Court.
_______________
|