Monday, December 27, 2010

Are they armed to tackle inside corruption

IIPM Prof Arindam Chaudhuri on Our Parliament and Parliamentarians' Work

With an increasing number of armed forces personnel found to be involved in cases of moral turpitude, it is being pertinently asked if the most disciplined system in the country is losing its grip over itself. Mayank Singh wonders

Usually considered to be the most incorruptible institution in the country, the Indian armed forces' reputation has seen some of its sheen waning in the recent years. Call it media activism (or rather over-activism, as Army officers love to call it) or whatever, but an increasing number of cases of corruption within the rank and file of the forces are coming to the fore. Be it the eloping of a colonel with his girlfriend, a lieutenant general accused of sexual harassment by a female colleague or high ranking officers found to be involved in land scams, the impeccable image of the forces does take a beating.

The flurry of media reports about officers of the Indian armed forces getting involved in acts of moral turpitude, deception and treachery has caused much consternation among the masses. What is more perturbing is that it's not just the lower rank officers whose name crop up in connection with corruption, moral or financial. It's the officers of the colonel, brigadier and lieutenant general ranks whose names come up in cases of debauchery and swindles. A.K. Nanda and Avadesh Prakash, both lieutenant generals, are the most recent and well-known examples.

The question is, if our armed forces are getting increasingly corrupt by the day or is it just that now such cases have started coming into the public domain, thanks to an aggressive and prowling media? The former conjecture can be true, so can be the second. May be both suppositions hold water. It depends on what side of the fence you are.

A senior officer in the South Block who has completed his staff tenure blames of sorts the media of 'dramatising' the things. He believes that corruption has not gone up in the armed forces. 'I appreciate that media reports things but sometimes it tends to paint everything black. It should not make generalisations. People don't let the inquiry finish and come out with the results. Officers accused of misconduct are declared guilty,' he says while talking to TSI, on the condition of anonymity.

Vice Admiral (retired) A. K. Singh is of the view that the organisation of the Indian armed forces is still as strong as it used to be, and should not be viewed as if something is wrong with them. He says, 'The system in the armed forces is very efficient and it reacts very quickly. It is a 1.3 million strong force and it may have one or two bad eggs. It gives immediate justice and does not wait for 25 years like in the Bhopal tragedy or the Tehelka case where the only people punished were the people from the forces.' He attributes the targeting of the armed forces by media on the saturation of reports on corruption by politicians and bureaucrats. He adds, 'The public consider the armed forces as the last institution in the country standing upright. It is fed up of the news about politicians and babus.' Some people opine that the armed forces draw their personnel from the general public. Every years lakhs of people vie for limited vacancies in the training institutes like the Indian Military Academy, Officer's Training Academy, Air Force Academy and the Naval Academy.

The editor of defence magazine Purple Berret, Commander Atul Bharadwaj, considers it to be over-fussiness to be so critical of the officers and men getting involved in the unexpected acts and behaviour. He says, 'Why is there so much fuss when the training and value system are strong. The armed forces never try to shield even very senior officers. Major General A. K. Lal was commanding a combat division and he was not spared.'

Armed Forces draw their men and officers from the same talent pool of society. 'In the post-globalisation world, the options have increased and the armed forces, too, are coming close to the society. The officers are leaving forces to join the corporate world. The armed forces have been traditionally kept away from society for this very reason that they do not catch the vices prevalent there,' says Bharadwaj, adding, 'Also keep in mind that there are very few senior positions in the organisation and this makes it vulnerable to all kinds of pushes and pulls and allegations.'

The forces have been at the receiving end because the cases which are filed against them are not defended or reported once they are found to be wrong. The case of Captain Poonam Kaur was found to be totally fabricated where she had alleged her senior colleagues of sexual harassment. The Shopian rape case is the most recent one where forces received an overwhelming negative publicity but when it was found wrong, it did not get any space or airtime in the newspapers and news channels. Same happened in Agartala Military Hospital where a civilian had levelled allegations of molestation against Colonel B. K. Das, which were later found to be incorrect.

The data of human rights violation, too, has a different picture to put forward. In 2006 and 2007, the number of cases reported were 21 and 27 respectively in Kashmir. Out of these 48 cases, 36 were found incorrect and some are still under investigation with three people already punished. Same picture comes up in the northeast as well. In 2006, 2007 and 2008, there were 19, 21 and 14 cases respectively reported. Of these 54 cases, 38 were found outrightly false. In the three legitimate cases, two people have been punished.

Vagaries of the changing times seem to be hitting the armed forces as well. The game of maligning fellow officers to knock them out of the reckoning for the higher posts has been happening, but the way issues of corruption and infighting are coming to the fore does talk of a decline in the discipline and the standards. These will have to be curbed before the forces totally lose their credibility as being the most ingenuous institution of the country.


An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM BBA MBA Institute: Student Notice Board
Run after passion and not money, says Arindam Chaudhuri
Award Conferred To Irom Chanu Sharmila By IIPM
IIPM’s Management Consulting Arm - Planman Consulting

IIPM Lucknow – News article in Economic Times and Times of India
Prof Rajita Chaudhuri follow some off-beat trends like organizing make up sessions
IIPM Prof Rajita Chaudhuri's Snaps

Saturday, December 11, 2010

S. T. Coleridge to R. H. Brabant

Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was a English lyrical poet, critic, and scholar, whose Musical Ballads, written with William Wordsworth, started the English Romantic movement. Though he's really merely famed today for his poetry, Col's contributions to the area of criticism and English language were several. For example, he not only create verbally the word 'selfless,' he brought in the word 'aesthetic' to the English language. In the following letter to his friend, Brabant, Coleridge talks about intricasies of life.


Monday Morning, march 13, 1815
Calne,

I missed the opportunity of sending the parcel on Saturday, by an Hour: and without affectation I did not think the contents of the inclosed Letter justified the expense of postage.'If you should have time to look over Dr Williams' larger work, in addition to what I have remarked in the slips of Paper, you will not fail to observe a sophism grounded on the admitted fact of the incapability to act aright in minds habitually vicious.

This, we all know, constitutes the difference between a crime and a vice: and makes the latter, even tho' comparatively trifling in each individual act, more hopeless and therefore of deeper Evil than any single Crime, however great: if only it be not such as involves as the condition of it's possibility, a prior vicious Habit.

This, I long ago observed, is the dire Curse of all habitual Immorality, that the impulses wax as the motives wane'like animals caught in the current of a Sea-vortex, (such as the Norwegian Maelstrohm) at first they rejoice in the pleasurable ease with which they are carried onward, with their consent yet without any effort of their will'as they swim, the servant gradually becomes the Tyrant, and finally they are sucked onward against their will: the more they see their danger, with the greater and more inevitable rapidity are they hurried toward and into it'.

Now from this fact Dr Williams deduces, that the inability to will good is no excuse for not doing so'in genere, and without reference to the origin of the inability'forgetting that our conscience never condemns us for what we cannot help unless this 'cannot in praesenti' is the result of a 'would not a preterity''all more Evil is either cum voluntate or de voluntate'. N.B. a voluntas causata is a contradiction, unless as causa sui.'Take Dr Williams's own instances'suppose the man stated as utterly incapable of loving God to have been created with this incapability, and you no more blame him than you blame a rattle snake for his Poison.'All Law human and divine acknowledges this distinction'as in the criminality of murder committed in drunkenness, and the impunibility of the same act committed in madness''.

Yours

S T Coleridge


An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri and Arindam chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
IIPM BBA MBA Institute: Student Notice Board
Run after passion and not money, says Arindam Chaudhuri
IIPM BBA MBA B-School: Rabindranath Tagore Peace Prize To Irom Chanu Sharmila
IIPM Lucknow – News article in Economic Times and Times of India
Arindam Chaudhuri (IIPM Dean) – ‘Every human being is a diamond’

Planman Consulting

Prof Rajita Chaudhuri on 'THEY ARE COMING TO GET YOU – NOT ALIENS SILLY'
IIPM Prof Rajita Chaudhuri's Snaps