Strange things are happening in the Karnataka Lokayukta. An institution which has given some credit to the state when its records on the political front hit the rock bottom is now being systematically undermined. It has been kept headless and police officials of questionable integrity have been posted to its key positions. To make matters worse, a media interview given by a police officer who formerly worked with the Lokayukta has been creating ripples. The officer has been quoted as saying that the Lokayuka itself is a cesspool of corruption and that there is an inherent inequity in the way Lokayukta operated.
That is, the official reasoned, the Lokayukta is often harsh with those indulging in small time corruption but the big fish somehow escaped from the net. There is nothing untrue about these observations but they were ill-timed. The officer’s purpose might have been to initiate a debate about the possible measures to stem the rot that is part of the watchdog. However, it has only helped disgruntled politicians who are using his views to mount a fresh round of attack on the Lokayukta and its former head Justice Santhosh Hegde.
Lokayukta has remained headless ever since Justice Shivaraj Patil resigned following media reports that he had purchased residential plots in violation of certain norms. The State has not been able to find a suitable replacement for him till now. Strangely, the Government wants to appoint another judge, Justice S.R. Bannurmath, who is also facing more or less similar charges as Justice Patil. Governor H.R. Bharadwaj has refused to clear the name of this judge but Chief Minister Sadananda Gowda is hell bent on appointing him. This has led to another round of friction between the government and the governor and the result is that the Lokayukta might remain headless for some more time. How can the chief minister insist on appointing to the exalted post someone whose reputation is under the clouds?. Is it so difficult to find someone who has an unblemished record?
That is not all. B.P. Gaonkar, an upright official posted as the Additional Director General of Police in the Anti-Corruption Wing of the Lokayuka has been transferred under strange circumstances. Of the two new officials appointed to it, one has a Lokayukta inquiry pending against him. How can the government appoint this officer to the very institution which is carrying out the inquiry against him? The BJP government is not the first one to face charges of corruption but no government in the past showed such an open and total disdain towards any semblance of probity in governance.
The purpose of the government is very clear. It wants to weaken and possibly kill the institution of the Lokayukta. Justice Bannurmath is the nominee of former chief minister B.S. Yediyurappa. Now out on bail, Yediyurappa is said to be in favour of the appointment of the tainted police officials also. Faced with innumerable inquiries into allegations of corruption against him, the former chief minister wants to pack the Lokayukta with men of his own choice.
Sadananda Gowda is just following his dictates. It is said that the transfer of Gaonkar from the Lokayukta was prompted by a threatening call that former Prime Minister H.D. Deve Gowda allegedly made to him in connection with a disproportionate assets case against his son. What can be stranger than this? If the former prime minister had threatened the official, it is the duty of the government to provide him with all the support and retain him in his position to carry out the investigations without any fear or favour. Will a government ever transfer an official because a leader of the opposition is not happy with him?
To make matters worse, the former Lokayukta police official has chosen to make allegations of corruption within the Lokayukta at this tumultuous time. The official did not name anyone but was very clear in his stand that the Lokayukta harboured many corrupt people. For one thing, no one had any illusion that all officials working for the Lokayukta were lily white. After all, the Lokayukta police wing is filled with officials drawn from the regular police department. How can we then expect the Lokayukta police to be any different? It is said that the better and the honest among the police officials are being drafted to serve in the Lokayukta but no one knows the criteria adopted to decide who is better or who is worse in the police department. Moreover, one can only imagine the number of honest police officials that can be found in a state where the search for an honest judge to head the Lokayukta has been proved futile so far!
The allegation of corruption within the Lokayukta has come as godsend for the BJP leaders who are on a mission to destroy the institution. The State BJP chief went to the extent of saying that a debate should be on whether it was worthwhile to retain the Lokayukta. Yediyurappa supporters are going to town claiming that the indictment of their leader by the Lokayukta is not to be taken seriously as the watchdog itself is not free from corruption.
All these seem like desperate measures being resorted to by the BJP as more and more skeletons are tumbling out of the government’s cupboard by the day. It is not just to the Lokayukta that persons with questionable reputation have been posted. There have been reports of such appointments to universities and to various key departments. The Government is clearly out to destroy all vital institutions in a last bid to save itself. And this is more lethal than corruption.
(The writer is an assistant professor at the Azim Premji University)
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