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Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Corruption is the price of politics; Bengal a case in point

 The stench of corruption is not nasty, offensive or politically crippling as it may have been in the remote, idyllic past. It is taken for granted that money and power are inextricably linked. The arrest of West Bengal Commerce and Industry minister Partha Chatterjee for his involvement in the School Service Commission recruitment scandal, by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) underscores the nexus. But there is no real sense of shock or dismay.

The ruling party in the state, the Trinamool Congress (TMC) has distanced itself from the revelation of a stash of ₹21.90 crore secreted in an apartment where Arpita Mukherjee, a close associate of Chatterjee lived. The party is doing its best to brush off the dirt attached to the discovery of several property title deeds in Mukherjee’s name recovered from the minister’s home. And, Chatterjee remains a minister in the Mamata Banerjee government, just as he remains the senior most leader of the All India party as General Secretary.

TMC immune to scandals

In many ways, the TMC has become inured to scandals involving money, because it has survived and flourished despite staggering revelations of close connections between several party leaders and Ponzi schemes and even straightforward barter deals of cash for influence. In 2013, the Saradha chit fund scam shone a very powerful light on shady connections between TMC leaders and Sudipta Sen. In 2016, the Rose Valley chit fund scam revealed more connections between money and TMC politicians. The popularity of Mamata Banerjee and her capacity to lead the party to victory in state elections remains intact. In the May 2021 state assembly elections, the BJP’s negative campaign on pervasive corruption and dynasty politics failed to deter voters from delivering a mandate to her party.

This is emphatically not an invitation to turn a blind eye to the chronic corruption in the political establishment. It is a reality check on the ability of political parties to survive exposures on the nexus between money and politics. The fact is Mamata Banerjee has won three state assembly elections in a row. Her party men who were picked up by ED or the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on charges of money laundering or cheating have also won in subsequent elections. Member of Parliament, Sudip Bandopadhyay was re-elected in 2019, after he was arrested by CBI in the Rose Valley scam and kept in jail in Odisha. Madan Mitra, arrested by CBI in the Saradha scam in 2014 was re-elected to the state assembly in 2021. Mukul Roy, earlier in the BJP and now in the TMC was questioned by CBI in the Saradha scam and was elected to the state assembly in 2021.

‘Tradition’ of corruption

Rent-seeking by those in power is endemic in West Bengal, as it is across India. In the final years of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)-led Left Front, the “party” had taken control of the state administration, including education institutions. News reports, anecdotal evidence and the trashing of merit lists for appointments and admissions underscored that college admissions were controlled by the Students Federation of India (SFI). Appointments of teachers in colleges, transfers and postings were also controlled from the CPI(M) headquarters in Alimuddin Street. The party had manoeuvred itself into the position of patron and everyone else was a client. The Mamata Banerjee regime continued with the patron-client relationship, but was found out and the resistance and fight back was more organised. CPI(M)’s senior leader Bikash Bhattacharya, a practising lawyer in the Supreme Court and Calcutta High Court has been working on the SSC scam case, pro bono, for years.

Soon after as the TMC ousted the Left Front, underqualified drop outs were appointed to school and college governing bodies. The man who became notorious because of his loutish behaviour was a strong man, turned leader, Arabul Islam.

Instead of the “party” it seems that leaders, some of them ministers in the Mamata Banerjee cabinet, became the channels for the disbursal of favours. The first minister who was named and shamed by the Calcutta High Court was Paresh Adhikari. His daughter who was a school teacher candidate overtook several others who had done better in the eligibility tests. The Calcutta High Court issued orders sacking the daughter and telling her to pay back her salary. It was, therefore, a matter of time before the needle of suspicion turned to Partha Chatterjee, who was education minister in the first two terms of the Mamata Banerjee government.

Making money from the desperate

The Partha Chatterjee arrest raises two issues. First, is the survival of politicians despite being investigated following arrest because voters do not see them as totally evil. Second, cash for recruitment to jobs, in the state sector as well as in the private sector is a “booming industry,” as one report stated. The two issues are not separate. There is a common basis. There are few jobs and lakhs, actually crores of young aspirants. The only way in which aspirants can game the system and jump ahead in the queue is by finding someone who has the power to hoist stragglers to the front of the line.

A new class of people have emerged, including politicians, some at the top end of the ladder, if the charges against Partha Chatterjee are proved correct, who have absolutely no hesitation in making money from the desperate. There is greed and there is no moral prohibition to stop people from exploiting the vulnerabilities of India’s young job seekers. There are unscrupulous agents who are open to peddling power to make money from desperate job seekers, regardless of whether these job seekers are qualified or have failed to qualify.

The Government of India’s Ministry of Education has put out an alert in March 2022 against sarvashiksha.online, samagra.shikshaabhiyan.co.in, and shikshaabhiyan.org.in, fake internet addresses whose only objective is to misguide job aspirants by using a similar layout to that of the original websites and demand money from the respondents for the recruitment process. In Uttar Pradesh a scam has been unearthed by the Yogi Adityanath government where fake documents were created for recruitment of teachers and assistant teachers against cash payments by job seekers. In Karnataka, the ₹100 crore police sub-inspector recruitment scam is another case in point, where mark sheets were faked by agents against cash extracted from job seekers. In March this year, over two crore young and educated aspirants for railway jobs ransacked railway stations and went amok because they had invested heavily in the recruitment process.

The cash for jobs scandals across India is a measure of the unemployment problem. The latest Centre for Monitoring the Indian Economy survey shows a jump in unemployment on the one hand and job losses on the other. Unemployment has shot up to 7.8 per cent and job losses have increased by 13 million, mostly in the agricultural sector. And, more and more young people, part of the “demographic dividend” generation are reporting that they are not looking for jobs. CMIE surveys, based on self-reporting, suggest that a mind boggling 60 per cent have dropped out of the labour market.

Arrests, exposing scams futile attempts

Exposing job scams seems to have no effect on scamsters, be they politicians or professional cheats. The agencies – ED, CBI and Income Tax – are ineffective. Regardless of how many raids, investigations, interrogations and arrests they conduct, the convictions do not come fast enough to warn off potential scamsters or deter the unscrupulous from exploiting the despairing young job seeker

The efficiency of the ED and CBI is open to question.  The conviction rate of ED is under one per cent. The “agencies” however do have a nuisance value, which up until now has worked to intimidate and embarrass the political opposition and influential critics. Reports analysing the targets of raids indicate that since 2014, Central agencies have investigated 570 of the Modi regime’s political rivals and critics and in some cases, their family members as well. The 570 figure is a staggering 340 per cent jump in raids compared to the 10 years of the Congress led United Progressive Alliance government. From about 17 cases a year, the number has zoomed to about 75 cases a year during the Modi years.

Mamata Banerjee’s call for a fast conclusion to the investigation and initiation of a case against Partha Chatterjee, after he was arrested by ED for money laundering is a challenge to the Modi government’s strategy of dragging its feet on getting to the point. As she and the rest of the opposition knows, an investigation that lingers on and on is a weapon that can be deployed again and again to embarrass the political opposition.

The lack of transparency and the opportunities for illicit fund raising in India’s election system have been debated by just about every political party and civil society organisations. None of these debates have succeeded in inhibiting the visibly more expensive campaign style and machinery of political parties. Raids by agencies, unearthing stacks of cash, jewellery, benami property allows political parties to engage in shrill rhetoric about “vendetta” politics.

Central agencies weapons against Opposition?

In public perception, there is a nexus; Mamata Banerjee described the BJP’s modus operandi as a washing machine. Tainted politicians who defect to the BJP miraculously drop off the ED-CBI-IT radar. Investigations dried up after Assam chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma, Mukul Roy, Suvendu Adhikari, Sovan Chatterjee defected to the BJP. On the other hand, Sanjay Raut of the Shiv Sena, Nawab Malik of the Nationalist Congress Party and the reopening of money laundering investigations case against former Jammu and Kashmir chief minister, 84-year-old Farooq Abdullah, all point to the tactical deployment of the agencies for intimidation and harassment. The same is true for the ED investigations that have been reopened in the National Herald case requiring interminable interrogation of Sonia and Rahul Gandhi.

The approaching Amrit Mahotsav deadline and the flagrantly unlawful cash realisations for its celebration in Kashmir could be a reason for hauling Farooq Abdullah in for questioning. Approaching elections in key states, including Gujarat and the intensifying anti BJP politics inside Parliament and in the streets are perceived as triggers for the reopening of investigations against the Gandhis.

The efficiency of vendetta politics involving agencies is questionable. Mamata Banerjee won a two thirds majority in 2021 despite a high decibel campaign about her tolerance of corruption in the Trinamool Congress.

Raids against anti-BJP opposition party leaders does serve a purpose. It bolsters the BJP and Modi’s claim to be the only alternative; the best of a not so good lot. The difference is that the opposition’s misdemeanours can be investigated; the ruling BJP’s cannot. Only 39 individuals linked to the BJP or its allies have been investigated for corruption since 2014. This is a classic move in politics, where the ruling regime projects itself as just a bit better than the rest.

The connection between fund collection and elections is real. The intense pressure on politicians and political parties to amass ever larger war chests, without falling foul of the Election Commission’s rules and watchful agencies has grown exponentially in the past decade. The inflows that keep the BJP buoyant like the 75 per cent of the ₹6,535 crore over 15 phases from anonymous and protected donors collected through electoral bonds are not available to smaller and regional parties. Spiralling rivalry and zooming costs of doing politics have pushed political parties to creatively raise money, in India and in other law abiding democracies as well.  The price of politics is expanding corruption.

 Shikha Mukerjee

Source: The Federal, 27/07/22

Thursday, July 21, 2022

Quote of the Day July 21, 2022

 

“If you believe you can, you probably can. If you believe you won't, you most assuredly won't. Belief is the ignition switch that gets you off the launching pad.”
Denis Waitley
“यदि आप यह मानते हैं कि आप कर सकते हैं, तो संभवतः आप कर सकते हैं। यदि यह सोचते हैं कि आप नहीं कर सकते, तो आप सुनिश्चित रुप से नहीं कर सकते। विश्वास वह स्विच है जो आपको आगे बढ़ाता है।”
डेनिस वेटले

Current Affairs-July 20, 2022

 

INDIA

– Shiv Sena splits in Lok Sabha as 12 out of 19 MPs join rebel camp; Rahul Shewale named party leader in House
– ‘Beyond the Misty Veil – Temple Tales of Uttarakhand’, a book by IAS Officer Aradhana Johri, released
– 1,63,370 renounced Indian citizenship in 2021, US top choice: Govt
– Chhattisgarh government to purchase cow urine at Rs 4 per litre under ‘Godhan Nyay Yojana’ from July 28

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

– ED arrests former Mumbai Police Commissioner Sanjay Pandey in connection with a money laundering probe
– Centre sets up committee, headed by former Union Agriculture Secretary Sanjay Agrawal, on the minimum support price and other issues in the farming sector
– CBIC clarifies on GST changes; 5% GST on these food items, like pulses, flour and rice, will not apply in case the pack size is over 25kg
– Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) releases compilation of success stories of 75,000 farmers
– Indian rupee declines to a record low of 80.0125 per dollar
– RBI hikes capital adequacy ratio for urban cooperative banks to 12%
– SEBI approves name of Ashish Kumar Chauhan as MD & CEO of NSE
– 17th CII – Exim Bank Conclave on India-Africa Growth Partnership held in New Delhi
– Go Digit General Insurance 1st to offer a ‘pay as you drive’ feature for motor insurance
– US was the top source country for inward remittances in India in 2020-21
– Yes Bank selects JC Flowers ARC as partner for sale of stressed loan portfolio
– Govt releases Natural Resource Accounting to track mineral, energy deposits

WORLD

– UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres calls for bold, coordinated responses to global food crisis
– India and European Union (EU) hold 10th round of talks on human rights,

SPORTS

– Athletics World Championships at Eugene (US): Mutaz Essa Barshim of Qatar wins men’s high jump gold in 2.37m
– International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) World Cup in Changwon, Korea: Rhythm Sangwan and Anish Bhanwala win bronze in mixed 25 m rapid fire pistol team event
– Former SC judge Vineet Saran appointed BCCI ethics officer & ombudsman

Current Affairs- July 21, 2022

 

INDIA

– India, Namibia sign MoU for bringing cheetah to Kuno-Palpur National Park in MP; extinct since 1952
– Proposed reservoir at Mekedatu to severely impact water flow; TN tells SC, Karnataka refutes claim
– Govt bans human embryo import in line with surrogacy, assisted reproductive tech laws
– China conducts military exercise with attack helicopters over Pangong Lake
– Renowned ghazal singer Bhupinder Singh dies at 82

ECONOMY & CORPORATE

– Govt slashes windfall tax on petrol (from Rs. 6/litre to nil), diesel (Rs 11 from Rs 13 per litre) and ATF (Rs 17,000 per tonne)
– Rajarshi Gupta appointed MD of ONGC Videsh Ltd (OVL)

WORLD

– Sri Lanka: Ranil Wickremesinghe elected president by MPs
– EU to defreeze some Russian assets to enable trade of food & fertilisers
– Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation awards Dissident Human Rights Award to Ukraine
– World Chess Day observed on July 20, marks the date of the establishment of the International Chess Federation (FIDE) in Paris in 1924
– International Moon Day observed on July 20, NASA’s Apollo 11 mission landed on Moon on July 20, 1969

Teach For India Fellowship Programme 2023: Applications are open

 Teach For India has opened the application window to apply for their two-year-long paid Fellowship Programme. The Fellowship entails two years of full-time teaching at schools for underprivileged children across eight Indian cities. The fellowship is open to both graduates and working professionals in India. The eight Indian cities are as follows: Delhi, Pune, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Kolkata, Chennai and Ahmedabad. Those who are selected for fellowships will receive training in the form of a residential workshop and "community engagement", before they are assigned to a school in one of these cities.

The Teach For India Fellowship application happens in four different rounds. Candidates can apply only once in any particular round. For the 2023 cohort, the dates for the four rounds are as follows:

  • The first round of applications will be accepted up to 18 September 2022 (results will be announced on 28 September 2022)
  • The second round's last date is 20 November 2022 (results will be released on 30 November 2022)
  • The third round of applicants can send in their forms till 29 January 2023 (results will be released on 8 February 2023)
  • The fourth round will conclude on 19 March 2023. (results will be released on 29 March 2023)

For each round, applications must be received by 11:59 PM IST on the specified due dates. On the indicated result dates, the application decision and any necessary next actions will be conveyed by email to the successful candidates.

To be eligible to apply for the fellowship, the applicants must be an Indian Citizen or an Overseas Citizen of India and must have either graduated or be graduating with a Bachelor's degree, latest by June/July 2023. Furthermore, this must be their first application to the Teach For India Fellowship 2023 cohort. Applicants would get a monthly salary of Rs 21,943 in addition to a housing allowance.

How to apply for Teach For India Fellowship Programme 2023

Interested candidates can follow the given instructions to apply for the Fellowship Programme of Teach For India.

Step 1: Visit the official website of Teach For India

Step 2: Sign up using your email address or LinkedIn profile

Step 3: After registration, fill out the application form with all the relevant information

Step 4: Submit the application form

Step 5: After the submission of the form, candidates have to take a 25-minute online test that must be attempted within 72 hours

The selection process for Teach For India Fellowship Programme

To get selected for the fellowship programme, applicants have to go through the following three stages.

Stage 1: Submitting the application form and completing an online test

Stage 2: Phone Interview

Stage 3: Visiting the assessment centre for a 5-minute lesson, a group activity with other applicants, and a short problem-solving activity.

The Teach For India Fellowship provides the most talented and driven young citizens of India with the chance to work as full-time teachers in some of the country's most under-resourced schools, working with children from underprivileged communities. Fellows change the lives of the students in their classroom, which in turn changes them personally and propels them into leadership roles for quality education.

Source: The Telegraph, 20/07/22

How to be an artificial intelligence & machine learning expert

 If you’re living in 2022, you could not have escaped the term AI/ML. Short for Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning, it has extended beyond just ‘tech-speak’ and is now a solid part of our collective imagination when it comes to modern-day science and technology.

You’ve heard this term everywhere, perhaps never fully knowing what it means and what purpose it fulfils. If you’re interested in technology in any form or if you envision working with computers and software, or if your daily routine includes managing a lot of data – now is the time for you to explore AI/ML. The Telegraph Online Edugraph brings you an insightful and enriching webinar that introduces you to the world of AI/ML and takes you through its various layers, including careers and opportunities, transforming you into an AI/ML expert!

The webinar How To Be An Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning Expert will be held on July 23, 2022 from 11:00 AM to 12:00 PM. The webinar is going to feature Guest Speaker Subhendu Dey, a globally revered thought leader in the fields of Cloud, Data, Strategy and Architecture.

Dey started his journey as an applications architect, then migrated to integration, followed by information architecture. While experimenting with data, he developed an interest in analytics and cross-skilled himself to work as a data scientist. He currently serves as Executive Architect, Cloud Advisory for Data & AI, IBM Consulting. His expansive range of experience has helped him emerge as a true leader in the technology consulting space, who can understand and appreciate inter-disciplinary complexities and serve as an effective guide for anyone who wishes to begin their journey in tangential fields of data and technology.

As most businesses in today’s time are undergoing a complete digital transformation, their work is becoming more and more integrated with data-handling. Most business operations include working with a tsunami of valuable data, which often becomes extremely cumbersome to collect, handle, analyse, and implement. The emergence of AI/ML has revolutionised the way we process data,thus, redefining the future of technology.

The webinar promises to offer an in-depth discussion on AI/ML. Here are the major themes that will be highlighted and discussed in the webinar:

  • What is AI/ML?
  • What is the future & scope of AI/ML?
  • What will you learn within the field of AI/ML?
  • The core career paths with AI/ML.
  • The diversified career paths with AI/ML.
  • The key skills you need to work within AI/ML.
  • The best resources and practices you need in order to develop your AI/ML knowledge.
  • The top courses (UG/PG/Diploma/Certifications) around AI/ML in India and their admissions & eligibility.

Students can submit their queries in the registration form and they will be picked up during an Q&A segment at the end of the session.

Register for the webinar here: bit.ly/htb-aiandml and take the first step to becoming an AI/ML expert.

Source: The Telegraph, 19/07/22












Decoding hunger

 Global Hunger Index report highlights the chronic food and nutritional insecurity plaguing India

Some simple truths bear repetition: climate change is real and India is going to face the brunt of its impacts in the next few decades. A recent report by the International Food Policy Research Institute estimates that India would be facing a 16% drop in food production, with the number of those at risk for hunger increasing by 23% by 2030 due to climate change. This revelation is significant since it comes in the wake of India’s poor showing in the Global Hunger Index 2022 wherein it ranked 101 out of 116 nations.

Such sobering statistics highlight the chronic food and nutritional insecurity plaguing India. During the raj, the colonial government did little to reduce hunger or poverty because of a myriad structural constraints and fiscal irresponsibility. Poverty in British India came to be understood from the unidimensional lens of hunger, a notion that was challenged by Amartya Sen who sought to do away with the artificial distinction between social characteristics of poverty (such as education and health) and economic characteristics of poverty.

Having suffered devastating famines and starvation deaths under oppressive colonial regimes, after the 1950s, developing nations strove to do two things: first, they agreed to progressively realise the socio-economic right to food in the long term; second, State Parties agreed to secure for citizens a ‘needsbased’ minimum core of the said right. A needs-based minimum core essentially means that State Parties need to ensure that a minimum acceptable level of food is provided for citizens’ needs and survival. India complied with the second commitment by guaranteeing adequate daily calorie requirements to its populace through a judicious mix of legal and policy initiatives like the Green Revolution, the public distribution system, and the National Food Security Act 2013.

These efforts led many African and Latin American nations to view India as a model to emulate in matters of providing food and safeguarding food security. But India still has a long way to go. Domestic surveys like NFHS5 have revealed that every third child in India below five years is stunted (35.5%) and underweight (32.1%). Further, FAO’s State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2020 concluded that India suffers from a 14% chronic malnutrition rate.

In practice, food security is not always understood comprehensively. There is thus an immediate need to rethink the current definitions of ‘right to food’ and ‘hunger’ so as to implement a multi-faceted approach. The correct question to ask is this: how does one ensure that food insecurity, starvation and malnutrition do not hinder the development of human capabilities in line with Sen’s vision? The answer lies in reconceptualising and realigning the domestic right to food laws and policies with a ‘value-based’ core approach as opposed to a need-based approach to the right to food and nutrition. A needs-based approach does not make a distinction between whether a person meets his pre-determined caloric intake, either by consuming one kilogramme of sugar in a day or through a balanced diet comprising necessary micronutrients and essential food groups. Per contra, a dignitarian value-based approach requires the State to secure the maximalist standards of dignity for citizens by broadening the ambit of what it considers to be ‘core’ obligations with respect to right to food. This is borne out when the State starts weaving into its legal fabric and policy formulations comprehensive dignitarian definitions of the right to food and hunger that cover such multi-faceted aspects of food security as safety, minimum nutrition value, means of access and control, differential dietary requirements and so on.

Even as India celebrates 75 years of Independence, it is unfortunate to note that official and judicial attitudes towards food security remain rooted in the outdated needsbased approach. With climate change set to exacerbate the food security situation in the country, a broader conceptualisation of the positive core obligations of the Indian State is the need of the hour.

Sushant Khalkho is with the National Law School of India University, Bangalore

Source: The Telegraph, 20/07/22