Following is the text of address by the Vice President of India, Shri M. Hamid Ansari at the Annual Bhimsen Sachar Memorial Lecture
on ‘Virtue in
Public Life’ organised by Servants of
People Society & Bhimsen Sachar Memorial Committee here today :
‘Virtue in Public Life’
“I
deem it a privilege to be invited to deliver the Bhimsen Sachar Memorial
Lecture today.
Bhimsen
Sachar was a freedom fighter, a political activist, an administrator and above
all a person who advocated and practiced the core values of our freedom
movement. As Chief Minister of Punjab on more
than one occasion in the early years of our Republic, he shouldered the onerous
responsibilities of putting in place administrative structures in the aftermath
of a major disruption. He served with distinction as Governor.
As
a political personality occupying high public office, Bhimsen Sachar would have
dealt with questions of governance. These are of a perennial nature and have
been posed in all periods and to all systems; each faced challenges, including
those of probity; each sought to developed appropriate responses.
Societies
throughout history have functioned mostly on the basis of an un-stated
consensus that provides the glue pertaining to social values, a set of do’s and
don’ts relating to the respective roles of the citizens and those entrusted by
them with responsibilities of governance. The compact is in the nature of a
trust. Record shows that points of tension arise whenever apprehensions develop
about this relationship.
Many
in this audience would agree that our society today, despite its firm moorings
in religion and tradition, is increasingly prone to be amoral in the behaviour
of its individuals and group components. Often, the connection between means
and ends is being lost or side-tracked and the view is rampant that the end
justifies the means, however devoid the latter may be of moral content.
The
implications of this for individual and collective conduct are far reaching.
Good and not-good, good and bad, moral and immoral, virtue and vice, are
inclinations that determine individual and group action and experience has
shown that disregarding them inevitably leads to moral anarchy and eventually
to social decay. For this reason societies in all periods of history have
sought to put in place, and observe, norms though which virtue is promoted and
vice eschewed.
Can
the norms be accepted or discarded selectively? If so, who makes this
determination, for what purpose, justification and duration? A good instance is
the question of lack of probity in public life, a matter very much in our every
day discourse though at times generating more heat than light.
The
desire and need for a virtuous society is not just a metaphysical goal which
lies in the ethereal realm of religion or philosophy but has tangible benefits
for common good of humanity. Virtue in public life provides a necessary, if not
sufficient, framework for sustained and harmonious political, economic and
social progress in society.
Allow
me to amplify. Virtue in public life goes beyond the normal clamour for probity
in Government and public administration and covers the entire spectrum of a
citizen’s public activity. Similarly, virtue is not restricted to absence of
corruption in financial or monetary terms, but includes values such as service,
sacrifice, faith, trust, courage, justice and ethical conduct. As the
philosopher Aristotle put it, virtue is a disposition for excellence in the
human soul. This virtue can be acquired.
In
an article in ‘Young India’ on October 22, 1925, Gandhi ji listed Seven Social
Sins which he considered to be spiritually most perilous for humanity. These
together constitute a good point of reference for any discussion on virtue in
public life. Allow me, therefore, to reiterate them:
Politics
without principles
Wealth
without work
Pleasure
without conscience
Knowledge
without character
Commerce
without morality
Science
without humanity
Worship
without sacrifice
It is evident that each of the human activities
listed here result in a socially relevant moral degradation if the
concomitant virtue cited with it is absent. Hence the imperative need for
imbibing and implementing them in social, and personal, behaviour
patterns.
There
can be other approaches to the problem. “Virtue in public life”, an American
academic wrote a few years back, “is less likely to be found in a clearer
understanding of virtue and more likely to be found in a clearer understanding
of public life”, adding that “virtue in public life is to be found not just in
the individual propensity to be ethical but more in the development of
organizational rules and procedures, in virtuous leadership, and in the
development rules and procedures, in various leadership, and in the development
of virtuous public cultures.”
Every
society has in place a set of laws and regulations to deal with violations of
rules requiring proper conduct by those who indulge in public affairs. The
adequacy of these remains a matter of unending debate.
Beyond
these, however, and in terms of principles and commitments, there are two
aspects of the requirement of probity in public domain. In the first place, I
would like to draw the attention of this audience to Article 51A of our
Constitution that prescribes among the duties of citizens the requirement “to
strive towards excellence in all spheres of individual and collective activity
so that the nation constantly rises to higher levels of endeavour and
achievement.”
This
requirement, of a quest for excellence, cannot evade the seven principles
prescribed by Gandhi ji and necessitates a commitment for their implementation
leading to probity in everyday life of a citizen.
In
the second place, and in our world of today, societies and states no longer
have the luxury of isolation. Instead, we have a community of states and a
globalisation of values. National sovereignty is increasingly circumscribed by
national commitments to global conventions. These, together, give teeth to the
principles and behaviour pledges inscribed in the Charter of the United
Nations.
For
the purpose of today’s talk the most relevant of these international
commitments, having a direct impact on an essential aspect of probity, is the
UN Convention against Corruption, adopted in October 2003 and somewhat
belatedly ratified by India
on May 11, 2011. This is a comprehensive document, has a direct relevance to
the question of probity in public life and its rationale and objectives
therefore need to be considered carefully.
The
Preamble of the Convention states that corruption poses threats to the
stability and security of societies, undermines institutions, values of
democracy, ethical values and justice, jeopardizes sustainable development and
the rule of law, has international ramifications, and leads to organised crime
and money laundering involving vast assets thereby threatening political
stability and development of states concerned. It stresses that the prevention
and eradication of corruption is a responsibility of all states, puts in place
a framework for observance, and urges in this endeavour international
cooperation as well as support of individuals and groups.
The
Preamble urges States to “foster a culture of rejection of corruption”.
II
Given
this requirement in terms of national and international norms and commitments,
where do we in India
stand in terms of perception and action in regard to this ailment?
The
matter is very much in the public domain. It has been said with much justice
that “evidence of corruption has moved from anecdotal to documentary”, that it
is Indian democracy’s “inconvenient fact”, that it violates human rights,
constitutional rights and Rule of Law, and that “it undermines the very social
fabric and the political and bureaucratic structure of the Indian society”.
Our
ranking in the global Corruption Perception Index is, to say the least,
distressing.
The
disease is not of recent origin but, in an earlier period, carried a social
stigma less evident today. In 1949 the poet Josh Malihabadi had written a long
poem entitled Rishwat. One couplet
summed up the public opprobrium attributed to the ailment:
Bhool kar bhi jo koi leta hai rishwat, chor hai
Aaj qaomi paagaloon main raat din yeh shour hai
The
perception of wide-spread corruption has widened and deepened in the public
mind. Furthermore, there is a nagging apprehension that the administrative and
judicial mechanism in place is inadequate as a deterrent. In January 2007 the
‘Ethics in Governance’ report of the Second Administrative Reform Commission
concluded that “anti corruption interventions so far made are seen to be
ineffectual and there is widespread public cynicism about them.” This cynicism,
it added, “is spreading so fast that it bodes ill for our democratic system
itself.”
It
is evident that more effective corrective action is needed to restore public
confidence. This has to be qualitatively different and must address three
aspects of the matter simultaneously. These relate to (a) propensity, (b)
opportunity, and (c) scope. It is essential to examine the role of each of
these in the genesis and perpetuation of corruption:
·
The propensity
to resort to illegal or immoral means to achieve desired ends is increasingly
pervasive in the wake of a sentiment that both traditional morality and
constitutional morality have somehow become un-necessary and not in need of
observance beyond the ritual of lip service. A culture of hedonism and of what
Nehru called “vulgar display of wealth” does of necessity lead to a culture of
inequality, very different from the requirements of justice, equality and
fraternity to which we swear allegiance as citizens. The only viable corrective
to this would lie in a concerted effort, in the family, the school, the work
place, and the civic domain to rejuvenate and re-imbibe the required social
values and, at the same time, put in place deterrents to ensure compliance.
·
Propensity could and does also emerge from
situational compulsion caused by real or created scarcity, by intentional
delays in the delivery of public service and the resultant moral dilemma faced
by the seeker of a public service. The petty corruption thus generated has a
differential impact on the less privileged whose capacity to resist is minimal.
The ARC report cited above found that “in a vast majority of cases of bribery,
the citizen is a victim of extortion” and that “experience has taught most
citizens that there is a vicious cycle of corruption and they often end up
losing much more by resisting corruption.”
·
The same holds for opportunity. Successive reports of government commissions over five
decades have suggested reform of procedures that would facilitate public
service delivery, introduce transparency and thereby reduce opportunity to go
astray. The Right to Information Act has helped rectify this in some measure;
much still remains to be done. Rigorous training to inculcate the concept of service is essential so that it is
rendered as a duty not a favour.
The scope of
what is considered corruption has to expand to cover the act as well as
actors, both the taker and giver of bribes. This is of particular relevance in
cases that go beyond petty corruption. A paper presented at a World Bank
workshop some years back observed that
“the problem of corruption lies at the intersection of the public and private
sectors. It is a two way street. Private interests, domestic and external,
wield their influence through illegal means to take advantage of opportunities
for corruption and rent seeking, and public institutions succumb to take these
and other sources of corruption in the absence of credible restraints.”
A
survey by the Swiss consultancy firm KPMG in March 2011 showed that “in many cases corruption is
induced by the private sector”, adding that “a large number of respondents
believe that corruption is a two-way street and people who pay bribes are as
much to blame for the current environment as those accepting such payments. The
regulation in India
tends to focus on the bribe taker rather than the bribe payer and hence
corporates do not shy away from adopting corrupt practices.”
III
There
are other dimensions to the problem. Given our social scene and traditions,
nepotism in some form or the other is, tacitly or explicitly, considered a
virtue. It is said to be “a custom with infinitely more practitioners than
defenders”. How is it to be defined in the Indian context of Kunba parvari ?
When and where does it violate canons of probity and becomes a corrupt
practise? Has any government or public body sought to develop a framework to
check it?
Much
of the debate on dealing with the perils of corruption has dealt with the legal
framework and law enforcement and the effort to make it produce better results.
This is essential but not sufficient. An aspect of the fight against
corruption, insufficiently addressed, is its impact on human rights and the
extent to which it derogates the Rule of Law that ensures administration of
justice by normal law courts, avoidance of arbitrary decision-making, and abuse
of discretionary power.
It
has been argued in this context that “the human rights approach to corruption
control mechanism makes the people of India central players in the corruption
resistance movement” and that “the law enforcement work of the government to
ensure corruption free governance ought to be perceived as a part of the right
of the people of India to seek a corruption-free government. Concomitantly, it
then becomes the duty of the government to ensure that all its affairs are
conducted in a manner that promotes transparency, accountability, and integrity
in public administration.”
One
clear benefit of such an approach would be to link up different ingredients of
good governance and thereby synergise the quest for better governance and
substantive rather than formal political legitimacy.
In
the final analysis, therefore, a fourfold approach to treat this deadly social
ailment and promote probity would lie in the combination of (a) ethical
training in norms incorporated in legally enforceable Code of Ethics, (b)
comprehensive protection of human rights, (c) a legal framework and regulatory
practices that enforce clash of interest rules, and (d) laws and procedures
that forbid nepotism in all its manifestations.
These
steps would assist the attainment of “excellence” in terms of the Duties
prescribed in the Constitution. The endeavour is to be individual and
collective. Here, as elsewhere, a Gandhian dictum is of relevance:
“You must be the change you wish to see in
the world.”
*****
Sanjay Kumar/VPI (2)/07.12.2012