12/22/1789: Justice Levi Woodbury born. The post Today in Supreme Court
History: December 22, 1789 appeared first on Reason.com.
Showing posts with label coalgate. Show all posts
How the Politics of Corruption Will Ensure a Third Term for Dr Man Mohan Singh as India’s Prime Minister.
Monumental ignorance of its politicians like Akin, Palin, Ryan and Romney, exposed through their statements, shape public opinion and the course of the presidential election in the US.
In India, the ignorance of the electorate and their inability to grasp complex issues, which the political opposition try to capitalise to portray Prime Minister Dr Man Mohan Singh as India's most corrupt leader, are likely to get him elected for a third term, despite his reticence to fend off unethical and motivated charges of corruption.
In all fairness, the eighty years old Singh, who boosted India's growth rate by bold fiscal action and little ado, must be looking forward to a quiet life at the end of his term ending in 2014. However, the bizarre Indian "politics of allegations of corruption" is shaping and fostering a third term of incumbency on this reluctant economist, who the rest of the world look towards as a Guru and an honest man.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Posted by Unknown
Tag :
#lrose,
Atkin,
coalgate,
Corruption,
Election,
India,
Man Mohan Singh,
Romney,
Ryan,
Sarah Palin,
Sonia Gandhi
Now the Indians Want to Send their Prime Minister to The Tihar Jail.
The Indian education system has
miserably failed to create a new generation of ‘thinking’ and discerning minds
to control the finger tips on the keyboards which deliver a variety of services
to the rest of the world.
Instead millions of Indian youth,
with ready access to the cyber world, whip up thoughtless and highly damaging
frenzy, like the twitter
trend ‘#coalgate’ created yesterday on a leaked report alleging Prime Minister
Man Mohan Singh of presiding over a scam
of $ 211 Billion involving sale of Indian coal mines to private companies.
What is more mind boggling than the penchant of theCAG ( Comptroller and Auditor General ) of India to project assumed losses of astronomical sums to the government on account of corruption, is the willingness of millions of ‘educated’ Indians, on whom the west happily outsource everything, to jump in to ridiculous conclusions and create a frenzy like 'coalgate'.
What is more mind boggling than the penchant of the
1.3 billion Indians who live in India
are a species apart on the surface of this earth which can’t see where the
petrol is coming from because it refuses to see what happens worldwide in the
supply of petrol. The average Indian believes government subsidy is the birth
right of every Indian. If you are generous, you can attribute this to a lack of
education which gives an overview of the world they live in and share with
others.
But for millions of educated
Indians, who share the information revolution and the cyberspace with the rest
of the world, there is no excuse to realise and accept that there is nothing
called a free meal.
For example, conceding that
corrupt practices were resorted to in execution, the Prime Minister had already
explained why and how the 2G spectrum was liberally distributed, as a
Government policy, to encourage the telecom Industry.
This has seen India’s subscriber
population exploding to a massive 700 million in a few years, who enjoy the
lowest of rates anywhere in the world, thanks to the $39 billion it didn’t
amass as licence fees, which would have been passed on to the consumers.
In fact what the Indian consumer
has benefited from is an indirect and unspoken subsidy of call charges
equivalent to the same amount, if they were to be compared with the rest of the
world. Whether the western investors would have rushed to India
to invest that kind of money in licence fees is a different matter.
The new report of the CAG
with accusation of loss of $211 billion to the government, which has been
leaked and subsequently refuted
by the CAG , arises from a government action
indented to stimulate the mining Industry.
The government and several
Industry leaders have already pointed out why the CAG ’s
conclusions are baseless.
"Many
of the blocks are uneconomic, you have to share between two or three parties
and most of these blocks have hardly been explored at all. So remember, you
would have to spend hundreds of millions of dollars in exploration, development
and infrastructure to exploit them," he said. "I think it will be
forgotten quickly."
With the furore created over the
issue, with heads of almost every leading Indian corporate from TATA to Arcelor
Mittal as well as the Prime Minister himself likely to get a summons from the
supreme court and possibly a term inside the infamous Tihar Jail already
hosting a few ministers, the Indian’s can forget not only the development of
the coal industry but any reform which should secure India’s legitimate
position among developed nations.
With the two corporate heads of
the $ 17 Billion Essar group already summoned by the Court in the fallout of
the 2G scam, similar action cannot be ruled out and the dust is not going to
settle despite any government attempt to brush away the aspersion cast by the
leaked report.
If that happens, only the
senseless politicians and thoughtless youth of India
are to be blamed.
Article first published as Now The Indians Want To Send Their Prime Minister To The Tihar Jail. on Technorati.
Article first published as Now The Indians Want To Send Their Prime Minister To The Tihar Jail. on Technorati.
Paybookclub Content Box
Get this Free auto refreshing Content Box for your website Now!
If you are looking for free content for your web site, it is right here.To increase your Google Page Rank and page hits, get this free auto updating content box on your page. Just copy and paste this code in your page html and watch your site updating with free and fresh content without you lifting a finger.
<div style="margin: 0 auto; width:100%; height:400px;">
<object type="text/html" data="https://paybookclub-v2.herokuapp.com/timelineOriginal.php" style="width:100%; height:100%; margin:1%;">
</object>
</div>