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EDITORIAL
Equality Before the Law
Must the CBI seek the governor's sanction before prosecuting a chief
minister. In formally implicating Prafulla Mahanta,
Assam's chief minister, in the letter of credit (LOC) scandal and seeking the state
governor's permission to prosecute him, the CBI has only given Indians an unmistakable
sense of deja vu. Analogies are being drawn with Laloo Prasad Yadav -- who faced a similar
predicament in Bihar's fodder scandal. Once again, an inquiry into fraud and embezzlement
is being subverted into a political football. The Congress has already demanded Mahanta's
resignation. On the other hand, his allies in the United Front are pointing to the CBI's
poor conviction record, never mind that they forced Laloo to demit office less than six
months ago. As an electoral drama unfolds, tracking down the culprits of the LOC swindle
is nobody's priority.
There are some lessons for India here. One, and admittedly this is hardly a new
discovery, politicians have a remarkably flexible sense of right and wrong. Morality is
modulated by exigencies of power. Thus, Laloo's friends and foes have reversed stances in
Mahanta's case. Second, there is something profoundly undemocratic about a mechanism which
requires the governor's permission to even begin legal proceedings against a chief
minister seen as corrupt. The CBI, warts and all, is the premier investigative agency in
this country. If it deems it fit to accuse any individual -- be he chief minister,
cricketer or carpenter -- of corruption, the matter has to be taken seriously. To ask the
governor to vet the CBI's charge-sheet is anachronistic. This is really the job of the
local public prosecutor. Also, while Assam's present governor, Lt-General (retd) S.K.
Sinha, is a man of rectitude, every governor need not be. A cosy governor-chief minister
nexus may well become a protection racket. It is time for a change in the prosecution
paradigm -- not because the individuals have outgrown the system but because the system
has outgrown the individuals.
Yes Comrade
Minister
The CPI(M) has finally learnt that it pays to be in the
government.
Wisdom, it seems, dawns belatedly on the proletarian vanguard.
Jyoti Basu, the evergreen chief minister of West Bengal, has begun his party's election
campaign with the assurance that in the event of the United Front winning a majority, the
CPI(M) will not shirk its responsibility. The implication is clear: this time the party
will not repeat its "historic blunder" of 1996 and will actually participate in
the government. The shift in tack is understandable. Confronted by the threat of being
squeezed out by the pincer movement of the Congress and the BJP, the CPI(M) needs to
assure its faithful that a vote for the hammer and sickle is not by definition a vote for
a non-governing party. This is important in the context of West Bengal because the state
is fully aware of the high cost of not having a meaningful stake at the Centre.
Basu's local compulsions apart, the CPI(M)'s apparent willingness to reconsider its
non-participation in bourgeoisie-led governments constitutes a grudging acknowledgement of
reality. Politics may be a mission or even part of a larger transformation of society, but
it is inextricably linked to power. Political parties exist to shape policies and
determine the tone of governance. By wilfully opting out of this duty due to some dogma,
the CPI(M) ended up signalling to its supporters that it was a non-player in national
politics. Rather than suffer the consequences of this realisation, the party has done a
U-turn. Far from mocking this departure from classical Marxist tenets, the CPI(M)'s
heretical turn has to be encouraged. It is only when politicians acquire a stake in the
power structure that they grasp the distinction between sloganeering and responsibility.
Between 1996 and 1997, the CPI(M) chanted disruptive slogans from the sidelines. It cost
India dearly. The damage cannot be undone, but at least someone has learnt something.
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