Monday, June 27, 2011

Our black money is here, not in Switzerland : India : SA Aiyar : TOI Blogs

Our black money is here, not in Switzerland : India : SA Aiyar : TOI Blogs

Baba Ramdev’s financial naiveté is only to be expected. But i am astonished that the media endlessly repeats the myth that enormous hoards of black money are lying in Swiss banks.

Only financial illiterates will leave their money in Swiss banks offering very low interest rates (sometimes under 1%). To maximize their gains and hide their cash trail, savvy crooks route their money through various tax havens, and then seek the assistance of financial managers to maximize gains.

click on above link for full article

Saturday, June 25, 2011

The Hindu : Opinion / Leader Page Articles : Defamation litigation: a survivor's kit

The Hindu : Opinion / Leader Page Articles : Defamation litigation: a survivor's kit

Defamation litigation: a survivor's kit

By Subramanian Swamy

Tuesday, Sep 21, 2004

The Supreme Court judgment in the Nakkeeran case is the main tool in the survival kit for honest media and other critics of politicians against libel litigation.

ON SEPTEMBER 17, the Tamil Nadu Government filed an affidavit in the Supreme Court stating that it had ordered the withdrawal of 125 defamation cases filed against The Hindu and various other publications. This is a tribute especially to The Hindu `parivar' for showing guts and challenging the constitutionality of the cases filed against its representatives. The Jayalalithaa Government chose discretion over valour by not risking the Supreme Court striking down the libel statute itself as unconstitutional. Rather than lose permanently the weapon of state harassment of critics that defamation law represents, the Government chose to back down.

This is the second time that the AIADMK State Government has directed a carte blanche withdrawal of defamation cases. The first time was on January 1, 1994 when the Tamil Nadu Government withdrew numerous defamation cases filed against me in several Sessions Courts in the State. The reason then was the same: the Supreme Court Bench of Chief Justice M.N. Venkatachalaiah and Justice B.P. Jeevan Reddy had heard extensive arguments from me as petitioner in person and the Tamil Nadu Government counsel on the defamation law, and then orally asked why the law should not be struck down. The Government counsel then asked for time, and came back a week later to say that all the cases against me had been withdrawn. Hence, the cause of action for my petition disappeared, and my petition became infructuous. I was personally relieved but the law survived for use on another day.

But Justice Jeevan Reddy, who had listened to me with great care, went on to write a landmark judgment in theNakkeeran case [1994] that incorporated the core of my arguments and citations from the United States Supreme Court and the United Kingdom's House of Lords. That judgment today c. The judgment however needs to be developed further by more decided cases further clarified by continued challenge to state-sponsored defamation litigation that has become far too frequent in the country, so that freedom of speech and expression can become more deep and extensive than at present.

Under the Indian Constitution, the fundamental right to free speech (Article 19) is subject to "reasonable restrictions." What is reasonable is subjective in a society; it can only be developed to some objectivity by cases decided in courts [`case law'] and according to the political culture of the times. At present, reasonableness is codified in two laws — first, in exceptions to criminal culpability incorporated in Sections 499 and 500 of the British colonial statute known as the Indian Penal Code (1870), and second, the limits to civil liability incorporated as tort law. In India, defamation proceedings can be initiated under either or both, together or in sequence. Most democratic countries have however done away with the criminal law, which is archaic and draconian. But India has not yet done so.

What is one to do if one receives a court summons for alleged defamation? For example, I once received a summons from a Delhi court because I had called a BJP leader, V.K. Malhotra, "an ignoramus." The remark was made by me during the Lok Sabha proceedings, but lifted by a sub-editor and inserted in a column I wrote for the magazine.

Under the law, I had to prove that it was true — or face imprisonment. Now, how does one prove that a person is an ignoramus in a court of law? Add to that the harassment I would have to suffer of travelling to court at least 10 times a year for at least five years to attend the case or face a warrant for my production in court. Or I would have to engage a lawyer who would charge me a hefty sum. All this for a mild rebuke of a political leader? The editor of the magazine decided he could not stomach it, so he apologised for printing the remark. I was left holding the bag.

However, I fought the case and won. Mr. Malhotra was directed to pay me Rs.8,000 as compensation for my petrol bills, which he paid with some reluctance. Now how did I do it?

I pulled out of my survival kit the first tool of defence: in a defamation case, the aggrieved person must prove "publication," which means Mr. Malhotra would have to prove first that I had, in the original text given to the magazine, written what was printed. The onus was on him to produce the original. Now which magazine keeps the original? He failed to produce it and I won.

In a 1997 press conference, I made some charges against Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi. He used Section 199 of the Criminal Procedure Code to get the Public Prosecutor to file a defamation case. This meant the contest in court was between me and the state, and not between me and the Chief Minister personally. Thus the Government would spend the money out of the public exchequer and use Government counsel to prosecute me, a totally unequal contest and wholly unfair (even if legal).

If Section 199 had not been there, the Chief Minister would have personally been the complainant and I would have had the right to cross-examine him. Now which busy politician would like that? Hence, I pulled out the second tool in my survival kit. I filed an application before the judge making the point that the alleged defamation related to the personal conduct of the Chief Minister and not to anything he did in the course of public duty. I argued that Section 199 would not apply. Thereafter, the State Public Prosecutor quickly lost interest in the case. Had the judge rejected my prayer, I would have gone in appeal to the Supreme Court and got Section 199 struck down. But alas, I could not.

In 1988 another Chief Minister, Ramakrishna Hegde, filed a suit against me under tort law for Rs.2 crore damages for my allegation that he was tapping telephones and using his office to benefit a relative in land deals. Although ultimately, the Kuldip Singh Commission and a parliamentary committee studying the Telegraph Act upheld my contentions, I would have had a problem had the court decided the case before these inquiry reports came out.

So I pulled out the third tool in my survival kit, namely the U.S. Supreme Court case laws, the most famous of which was The New York Times case decided in 1964. Contrary to popular impression, U.S. case laws on fundamental rights are applicable to India following a Supreme Court judgment in an Indian Express case in 1959.

Furthermore, since 1994, these U.S. case laws have become substantially a part of Indian law, thanks to Justice Jeevan Reddy's judgment in the Nakkeeran case.

The principle in these case laws, restricted to public persons suing for damages, is wonderfully protective of free speech: if a person in public life, including one in government, feels aggrieved by a defamatory statement, then that person must first prove in court that the defamatory statement is not only false, but that the maker of the statement knew it to be false. That is, it must be proved by the defamed plaintiff to be a reckless disregard of the truth by the defamer defendant. This principle thus reversed the traditional onus on the defamer to prove his or her allegation, and placed the burden of proof on the defamed.

This reversal of burden of proof is just, essentially because a public person has the opportunity to go before the media and rebut the defamation in a way aggrieved private persons cannot do. If criticism and allegations against a public person have to be proved in a court of law, what is likely to happen is that public spirited individuals will be discouraged and thus dissuaded from making the criticism. This is what the U.S. Supreme Court in the famous New York Times case characterised as a "chilling effect" on public debate; it held this to be bad for democracy.

Hence the need to balance the protection of reputation in law with the democratic need for transparency and vibrant public debate. The U.S. Supreme Court admirably set the balance for freedom and democracy.

Since Mr. Hegde was an intelligent man, he recognised what my survival strategy meant. He would have come on the stand in court. He would have been examined and cross-examined on why what I said was not true, and how he knew that I had known all along that my charges were false and yet I made them. He therefore sent me a message one day wanting to know if I would call it quits. So his defamation case went from one adjournment to another, until it lapsed upon his death. Before his passing, Hegde and I met. Both of us agreed that it was unwise for politicians who have so much access to the media to rebut charges to file defamation cases and waste the time of already overburdened courts. I got the impression that some sharp lawyer was behind his temporary loss of judgment in filing the case.

Today, with developing case laws, defamation litigation has become a toothless tiger for politicians to use against the media. There are enough dental tools in my survival kit to ensure this. I am therefore writing a full Manual on how to expose dishonest politicians and get away without being harassed in court. I hope honest critics will no more hesitate to speak their minds about what they know to be the truth even if they cannot prove this in court beyond a reasonable doubt.

I am happy therefore that The Hindu chose to fight it out rather than capitulate. More should follow its lead for a better democracy and a freer media.

(The author, an economist, is a former Union Law Minister. As a rule he argues his own cases in court without the agency of lawyers.)


Saturday, June 11, 2011

Revolt of the outlander

Revolt of the outlander

REVOLT OF THE OUTLANDER
- Anna Hazare and Ramdev appeal to two distinct social classes

Last Saturday evening, an English language television news channel sent one of its coquettish anchors, who otherwise specialized in going gush-gush over Bollywood stars, to report on Baba Ramdev’s ‘yoga camp’ in Delhi’s Ramlila Maidan. The lady had apparently never seen life on the other side of the tracks — or, at least, successfully pretended she hadn’t — and was wide-eyed in astonishment at both the numbers and the motivation of people who had travelled long distances to be with the man dubbed the “rock star of yoga”. She was also bowled over by the huge media presence. “There are channels here,” she said in breathless astonishment, “that I’ve never heard of.”

For that India whose TV viewing doesn’t go beyond the news and entertainment channels available on Tata Sky, the ignorance is understandable. There is an India People-Like-Us know and claim to understand, even if it is from a position of detachment. This includes the mysterious, mystical India personified by the flowing white robes and the ‘wellness’ philosophy of Sri Sri Ravi Shankar. The PLUs also habitually invoke the romanticism of rural life, even if they are understandably horrified by the Taliban-like decisions of khap panchayats.

That there are multiple Indias is a truism. It is also a truism that the only time the kaleidoscope of India finds some reflection in either the ‘national’ or the mainstream regional media is during an election. That’s the time the limousine liberals are sponsored by indulgent bankers to travel in comfort to the wilderness and even do an election-related chat show from a dusty truckers’ dhaba in West Midnapore or the roof of a garish hotel in Gaya.

Unfortunately, the season for political tourism is all too brief. It is always possible to gauge voting intentions during an emotionally charged campaign and even report the quantum of economic change brought about by India’s soaring gross domestic product in the small market towns and neighbouring villages. It is never a media priority to understand the corresponding shifts in aesthetic and social impulses.

The multiplying consequences of passionate Islamic discourses by tele-evangelists have, for example, led to a sharp rise in social conservatism among India’s Muslims. Some of this is even sartorially self-evident. Less understood, however, is the impact of the discourses broadcast by TV channels such as Aastha on the mofussil Hindu imagination. Have the unending emphasis on true dharma and the constant invocations of righteousness had an unforeseen political consequence?

For the past three years at least, I have been told of the subterranean buzz around Ramdev’s robust festivals of health and patriotism all over India. The extent to which the surge in religiosity has been brought about by rising TV viewership is difficult to quantify. All that can be said is that Ramdev’s decision to expand his mission statement to demanding political action against organized venality was not born out of thin air. It stemmed from his reading of the responses he got from the non-metropolitan audiences he spends most of the year addressing.

There is a sharp class divide between the ‘civil society’ movements launched by Anna Hazare and Ramdev. The old Gandhian and his core support team are public spirited individuals who in a more settled age would perhaps have been a part of the institutional apparatus of governance. Blessed with modern education and global exposure —note the surfeit of Magsaysay Award winners in Anna’s Star Chamber — they are people who talk the modern idiom of development and politics, a language the mainstream media finds comprehensible, comforting and respectable. The Anna movement has drawn sustenance from three quarters: from a core network of professional activists with a disdain for organized politics, from senior citizens, usually active in residents’ welfare associations, horrified by the moral decline of a world they can’t keep pace with, and a section of idealistic but impressionable youth which believes that social media networking is a force for the good.

The Anna movement was a made-in-media campaign. The crowds that flocked to his rally in Delhi’s Jantar Mantar two months ago did so without any incentive and organization. However, its spontaneity was also governed by a spectacular degree of TV hype that unnerved the government and forced it into setting up a joint committee to draft a new lok pal bill. No doubt the process was helped by the endearing personality of Anna — a man who exudes both simplicity and sincerity. However, it is worth considering whether or not the multiplier effects of the movement would have been that marked had the location of the fast not been the heart of Lutyen’s Delhi.

Compared to the 5,000 or so people who thronged Jantar Mantar at the peak of Anna’s fast, Ramdev began his show with a dedicated audience of something around 40,000 people. While most of Anna’s supporters were from the national capital region — plus shows of solidarity in the state capitals — the yoga guru mobilized people from all over the country, including a large contingent from West Bengal. Yet, the government risked a potential riot by forcibly evicting the crowd and shutting down the show in the early hours of last Sunday. What explains the visible double-standards?

The answer is obvious. The ‘civil society’ that Anna represented was the influential metropolitan middle class, many of whom were PLUs. Ramdev’s support base was drawn primarily from B, C and D category towns and lacked either clout or glamour. The English-language media was openly contemptuous of his mission, portraying it as a variant of another Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh-sponsored gau rakshan show. There was not a single Bollywood star to keep company of the relatively unknown religious figures that graced Ramdev’s dais. Even Anna was in two minds over being present on the stage. Each of the sadhus may have had a following of lakhs but this was not the power elite Delhi knew. To them, it was an assembly of obscurantists.

The scepticism of the PLUs contrasted starkly with the earnestness with which the Hindi channels dealt with the Ramdev phenomenon. To their viewership, Ramdev was a venerated figure and not someone whose raw understanding of economics was worthy of mockery.

The sharp class divide was unmistakable. The last occasion I witnessed this was the Ayodhya movement. Till L.K. Advani’s rath yatra in 1990, cosmopolitan India treated the fuss over Ram’s birthplace with sneering contempt. It was blind to the raw emotions unleashed in the hinterland, a phenomenon that was dismissed as ‘false consciousness’.

There is nothing as yet to indicate that Ramdev is likely to trigger a similar explosion of sentiment. Yet, the yogic entrepreneur has succeeded in extending the reach of the anti-corruption movement into the deep interior of the Hindi heartland. He has complemented a modernist unease with corrupt governance with populist anger against a venal, elitist order — note how his demand to secure the return of black money stashed in foreign shores was cleverly twinned with the demand to replace English with the vernacular. Ramdev has triggered the revolt of the outlander.

The Hindu faith has traditionally been caste-based and localized. Yet, there has been a congregational undercurrent that has subsumed these divisions. Over the past two decades and thanks in no small measure to growing TV viewership, a new congregational faith has injected a new energy into the Hindu universe. Particularly noteworthy is the growing marginalization of the Brahminical order. Ramdev, a Yadav by caste, personifies this phenomenon. The Congress may have miscalculated by declaring total war on him.

Tuesday, June 07, 2011

RSS: From Ram To Ramdev

OUTLOOK - Blogs

RSS: From Ram To Ramdev

Hindutava ideologue K.N. Govindacharya, when asked by CNN-IBN why the issue of corruption raised by the principal opposition party BJP, particularly its PM-in-waiting LK Advani during the 2009 Lok Sabha elections, has not been able to evoke the same response as Anna Hazare and Baba Ramdev have been able to:

The principal opposition party lacks credibility to take up this issue. First of all, they should have addressed this issue through their respective state governments and if their performance had been above board and if they had dismissed certain governments, then definitely their voice would have been credible in the minds of the people. They have not done it. So, therefore, the opposition role has to be played by some people who also may be custodians of people's will and aspirations.

And when specifically asked whether the RSS finds Ramdev more credible than the BJP:

Summarily, if it has to say, so definitely the answer will be yes: Anna Hazare, Ramdevji and such persons are much more credible today than the political people. I think that this movement will not fail - each has got his contributions to make. So Lokpal Bill also has to come. Stashed, illegal money abroad, also has to come back. For all these, political decisions will have to be taken —either by the ruling party, if not the battle will have to be taken up by others as well. But I think the batons would pass. The movement will continue. And success is assured.

Also Read: Outlook's May 30 story: The R + RSS Formula- and see RSS general secretary Bhaiyyaji Joshi's letter of May 20 asking the RSS workers to swayamsevaks to support and participate in Baba Ramdev’s "aandolan" on June 4:

Baba Ramdev betrayal sparks doom gloom in RSS : North: India Today

Baba Ramdev betrayal sparks doom gloom in RSS : North: India Today

| Lucknow, June 5, 2011 | Updated 10:21 IST

A pall of gloom descended over the saffron camp on Saturday evening following what was perceived to be a complete betrayal of a "mass movement" by Ramdev. His "treachery" has crashed the Sangh's hopes of discrediting the government on the issue of black money. The anti-corruption "movement" is all but over because, according to the RSS men who propped Ramdev, they promoted a "dubious icon".

During the meetings Ramdev and his deputy Balakrishan had with the Union ministers, the CBDT and ED officials showed them evidence of various illegalities in the setting up yoga centres and ayurvedic pharmacies by the Patanjali Yogpeeth. In fact, the Roorkee SDM's order of May 5 establishes that Ramdev's Patanjali Yogapeeth is involved in grabbing about 44 bighas of farmers' land in Aurangabad village in the Roorkee sub-division.

"They (the officials) may have put pressure on him. What can I say…He has struck a deal without even telling us," Govindacharya, the man mobilising the Sangh cadre to join Ramdev's "movement", said. He agreed that the government may have "put pressure" on Ramdev because he has several dubious land deals and a vast empire of yoga ashrams and ayurvedic pharmacies. "He may be protecting his commercial interests," he added.

The RSS had exhorted all its state units and the ABVP activists to join Ramdev. Govindacharya's Bharat Swabhiman Trust also was mobilising workers. But all this effort went to waste. "He (Ramdev) did not involve any of us in negotiating with the government. He and his deputy Balakrishna were the chief negotiators and he became the chief spokesperson. Our Ved Pratap Vaidik was involved but perhaps even he was not told about the deal's actual contours," he added.

Ramdev's agitation was being sponsored by the RSS and supported by the BJP/VHP. The BJP's president, Nitin Gadkari, had even issued a statement supporting Ramdev. VHP leader Ashok Singh had announced his plan to join Ramdev's fast and the Ram Janmabhoomi poster-girl sadhvi Rithambhara was present at the venue of the fast.

The RSS second-in-command, Suresh Joshi, had written to all state units of the Sangh to extend whole-hearted support to Ramdev's movement, which was officially launched on June 4. An extraordinary appeal, it was being perceived by the common swayamsevaks as an equivalent to the Sangh's war cry against Indira Gandhi during the Emergency.

The men working overtime behind the scenes were Sangh ideologue K.N. Govindacharya and his friends - Ajit Doval of the Vivekananda International Foundation, Janata Party chief Subramanian Swamy, RSS ideologue S. Gurumurthy et al - to be the figurehead of the "mass movement".

Despite a note of caution by some in the Sangh circles about Ramdev's credibility, these people still went ahead and projected him as an icon against corruption. The RSS had a limited goal to achieve in Ramdev's agitation - putting pressure on the government to disclose the names of the 18 Indians supplied by the LGT bank in Leichtenstein, a tax haven in Germany, and getting some kind of commitment to recover these assets. The idea was to discredit the government and make some brownie points on black money. But all these hopes crashed because Ramdev turned out to be "too smart". According to Govindacharya, the movement is "over". He said, "He (Ramdev) has spilt the milk. We did not even achieve our limited goal. All our effort has practically come to zilch."

On what the future holds, he said: "Right now, I am just watching him on television and laughing. Actually, I knew on Friday it was all over when I went to the Ramlila Maidan; I could figure out the way he was talking. Let me just take it in for now." The BJP, which had extended "moral support" to Ramdev, seemed very confused. "We don't know what has happened. All I can tell you is that the Congress is not serious about tackling corruption and they will undermine any effort to cleanse the system," BJP chief spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad said. The RSS did not say anything officially though a number of swayamsevaks were seen openly shouting slogans against the yoga guru.

The buzz in the Sangh circles is that an astrologer, who advises the saffron leaders on important issues, had told the organisers not to get too involved with Ramdev's movement as he would "fall flat on his face". By Friday evening, several cadres had called up the astrologer, telling him to keep a fast on Saturday as penance for his "wrong prediction".

For this reason, the soothsayer was actually fasting on Saturday when the twist in the tale appeared. "I am happy my prediction has come true," he said.

Sunday, June 05, 2011

Rediff On The NeT: Swamy declares war on BJP

Rediff On The NeT: Swamy declares war on BJP
Sometime Apr-May 1998

Swamy declares war on BJP


Rajesh Ramachandran in New Delhi

Dr Subramanian Swamy's tempestuous association with the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party is over.
Dr Swamy will now sit in the Opposition and try to topple the Vajpayee government after he gets clearance from All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam supremo J Jayalalitha.
The Janata Party president says he will form a secular front soon. He has already had discussions with Congress president Sonia Gandhi and Communist Party of India-Marxist general secretary Harkishen Singh Surjeet towards this end.
Dr Swamy says he plans to expose the BJP and Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh. "I want to bring together all those elements who are committed to fight the RSS," he told a crowded media conference on Wednesday.
His first salvo was against Home Minister Lal Kishinchand Advani. "The home minister whose business it is not to talk about the legal and electoral system, has forced the pace by proposing the old RSS dream of a new Presidential Constitution with a list system of elections. This proposal is barely different from what Adolf Hitler proposed to von Hindenburg in 1932 after being sworn in as deputy chancellor on a fractured mandate."
Dr Swamy alleged that the home ministry has decided to recommend the Bharat Ratna posthumously for RSS founder Dr Keshav Baliram Hedgewar and his successor, M G Golwalkar. The JP leader claimed an RSS contingent would march down Rajpath during the next Republic Day parade.
He said he would remain in the AIADMK-led front in Tamil Nadu, but was compelled to sever his ties with the BJP formally since he was not included in the 14 member co-ordination committee.
Dr Swamy said he would convince Jayalalitha about toppling the Vajpayee government, but would not topple the BJP-led front at the Centre "unless I have express clearance from Ms Jayalalitha."
"Even if the government is brought down, there is no alternative," he said, "so my efforts would be directed at forming a new configuration of existing parties which is viable and stable."
Dr Swamy has ruled out inducting the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and Telugu Desam Party from the proposed secular front, as the TDP had lent support to the BJP and the DMK is the AIADMK's primary adversary in Tamil Nadu.
He said he had Jayalalitha's "blessing" to charter his own course in national politics. "I have met the leaders of all important political parties. My goal is the emergence of a secular front in the current Lok Sabha. The BJP is incapable of running a coalition. It is a party which believes in hegemony and would wipe out all the allies," he added.
Dr Swamy began his political career with the Bharatiya Jan Sangh, the earlier avatar of the BJP. When the Jan Sangh merged with the Janata Party, he veered away from his political parents and evolved into one of the BJP's fiercest critics after the party was formed in March 1980.
In a strange twist, the maverick politician -- who had attacked Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Advani over the years -- became a BJP ally just before the general election when it formed an electoral alliance with Jayalalitha. Dr Swamy, who filed many of the corruption cases against Jayalalitha, had mended fences with the mercurial Puratchi Thailavi (Revolutionary Leader) earlier. With her unexpected electoral success in Tamil Nadu, Jayalalitha wanted Dr Swamy to be made a Cabinet minister, but the BJP rejected the suggestion.
After a war of nerves over the issue, Jayalalitha finally consented to support the BJP effort to form a government, and Dr Swamy became a signatory to the national agenda for governance drawn up by the BJP and its allies. All the signatories, the BJP announced then, would be members of the co-ordination committee.
Last week, however, the BJP refused to make Dr Swamy a member of the committee on the ground that he had not voted for the Vajpayee government during the vote of confidence. All other leaders of the AIADMK's allies were made members of the committee.
The BJP, it appeared, had convinced Jayalalitha about the need to drop Dr Swamy from the committee. On Wednesday, Dr Swamy alleged that Jayalalitha was not informed about his exclusion from the committee when its convener Jaswant Singh met her in Madras on Saturday.

RELATED REPORT:
AIADMK's allies miffed with Jaya

Interesting------------> EARLIER CHAT/INTERVIEWS:
'Advani, Joshi, Uma Bharti must resign'
'There is no question of my bringing down the Vajpayee government'
'The problems will arise if the BJP ignores the issues relating to Tamil Nadu'
''The BJP cannot say that their devotion to Ram is higher than the Constitution of India'