Anna Hazare
Anna Hazare real
Name is Kisan Bapat Baburao Hazare
was born in a Hindu Maratha (Kuruba Dhangar Caste which are Yadavs, found now
in Maharastra(born 15 June
1937) is an Indian social activist who led movements to promote rural
development, increase government transparency, and investigate and punish
corruption in public life. In addition to organising and encouraging grassroots
movements, Hazare frequently conducted hunger strikes to further his causes—a
tactic reminiscent, to many, of the work of Mohandas K. Gandhi.
Hazare also contributed to the development and structuring of Ralegan
Siddhi, a village in Parner taluka of Ahmednagar district, Maharashtra, India. He was
awarded the Padma Bhushan—the third-highest civilian award—by the
Government of India in 1992 for his efforts in
establishing this village as a model for others.
Hazare started
a hunger
strike on 5 April 2011 to exert pressure on the Indian government to enact
a stringent anti-corruption law, The Lokpal Bill, 2011 as envisaged in the Jan
Lokpal Bill, for the institution of an ombudsman
with the power to deal with corruption in public places. The fast led to
nation-wide protests in support. The fast ended on 9 April 2011, a day after
the government accepted Hazare's demands. The government issued a gazette
notification on the formation of a joint committee, consisting of government
and civil society representatives, to draft the legislation.
Foreign
Policy magazine named him among top 100 global thinkers in 2011. Also
in 2011, Hazare was ranked as the most influential person in Mumbai by a
national daily newspaper.He has faced criticism for his authoritarian views on justice, including death
as punishment for corrupt public officials and his alleged support for forced vasectomies
as a method of family planning.
Early life
Kisan Baburao
Hazare was born on 15 June 1937
(some sources say 15 January 1940) in
Bhingar, near Ahmednagar.
He was the eldest son of Baburao Hazare and Laxmi Bai. He has two sisters and
four brothers. He later adopted the name Anna, which in Marathi
means "elder person" or "father".
His father
worked as an unskilled labourer in Ayurveda Ashram Pharmacy and struggled
to support the family financially. In time, the family moved to their ancestral
village of Ralegan Siddhi, where they owned a small amount of
agricultural land. A relative took on the burden of providing Kisan with an
education, taking him to Mumbai because the village had no primary school. The
relative became unable financially to continue the support and Kisan's
schooling ended in the Standard Seventh grade; his siblings never attended
school.He started selling flowers at the Dadar railway station in Mumbai and eventually managed to own
two flower shops in the city.[He also became involved in vigilantism, joining groups who acted to prevent
landlords' thugs from intimidating the poor out of their shelter.
Military service
Hazare was
drafted in the Indian Army in April 1960, where he initially worked as
an army truck driver and was later attested as a soldier.
He undertook army training at Aurangabad.
During the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965, Hazare was
posted at the border in the Khem Karan sector. He was the sole survivor of an enemy
attack—variously claimed to have been a bomb, an aerial assault and an exchange
of fire at the border—while he was driving a truck.
The experiences of wartime, coupled with the poverty from which he had come,
affected him. He considered suicide at one point but turned instead to
pondering the meaning of life and death.He said of the truck attack, "[It] sent me thinking. I felt that God
wanted me to stay alive for some reason. I was reborn in the battlefield of
Khem Karan. And I decided to dedicate my new life to serving people."
At a book stand in New Delhi railway station, he came across Swami
Vivekananda's booklet "Call to the youth for nation building"
which inspired him to think deeper. He spent his spare time reading the works
of Swami Vivekananda, Gandhi, and Vinoba
Bhave.In a blog post, Hazare expressed his views on Kashmir by saying
that it was his "active conviction that Kashmir is an integral part of
India" and that if required once again for service, he would remain
"ready to take part in war against Pakistan."
During his
fifteen year career in the army (1960–75),Anna Hazare was posted at several locations, including Punjab (Indo Pak war 1965), Nagaland, Bombay (1971) and Jammu (1974)
During the Indo
pak war, Hazare survived a road crash while driving for the army. He
interpreted his survival as a further sign that his life was intended to be
dedicated to service.He had another escape in Nagaland, where one night, underground Naga rebels
attacked his post and killed all the inmates. He had a miraculous escape as he
had gone out to return nature's call and hence turned out to be the lone survivor.
Official
records show that he was honourably discharged in 1975 after completing 12
years of service.
Transformation of Ralegan Siddhi
Hazare returned
to Ralegan
Siddhi, a village then described by Satpathy and Mehta as "one of the
many villages of India plagued by acute poverty, deprivation, a fragile
ecosystem, neglect and hopelessness."
Although most
of the villagers owned some land, cultivation was extremely difficult due to
the rocky ground preventing retention of the monsoon rains,
this situation was worsened by gradual environmental deterioration as trees
were cut down, erosion
spread and droughts were also experienced. The shortage of water also led to
disease from unsanitary conditions and water reuse for multiple purposes. The
economy of the village had become reliant on the illegal manufacture and sale
of alcohol, a product on which many of the villagers had become dependent. Many
inhabitants borrowed from moneylenders to survive, paying monthly interest rates of
as much as 10%. Crime and violence (including domestic violence) had become
commonplace, while education and employment opportunities were poor.
Anna with Mahatma
Gandhi statue in Ralegan Siddhi
Hazare was
relatively wealthy because of the gratuity from
his army service. He set about using that money to restore a run-down,
vandalised village temple as a focal point for the community. Some were able to
respond with small financial donations but many other villagers, particularly
among the elderly, donated their labour in a process that became known as shramdaan.
Some youths also became involved in the work and these he organised into a Tarun
Mandal (Youth Association). One of the works of Vivekananda which he had
read was Call to the youth for nation building .
Prohibition of alcohol
Hazare and the
youth group decided to take up the issue of alcoholism to drive a process of
reform. At a meeting conducted in the temple, the villagers resolved to close
down liquor dens and ban alcohol in the village. Since these resolutions were
made in the temple, they became, in a sense, religious commitments. Over thirty
liquor brewing units voluntarily closed their establishments. Those who did not
succumb to social pressure were forced to close their businesses when the youth
group smashed their premises. The owners could not complain as their businesses
were illegal.
Once 3 drunken
villagers were tied to pillars and then flogged,
personally by Hazare with his army belt. He justified this punishment by stating
that "rural India was a harsh society",
and that
Doesn't a
mother administer bitter medicines to a sick child when she knows that the
medicine can cure her child? The child may not like the medicine, but the
mother does it only because she cares for the child. The alcoholics were
punished so that their families would not be destroyed.
Hazare appealed
to the government of Maharashtra to pass a law whereby prohibition would come
into force in a village if 25% of the women in the village demanded it. In 2009
the state government amended the Bombay Prohibition Act, 1949 to reflect this.
It was decided
to ban the sale of tobacco, cigarettes, and beedies (an
unfiltered cigarette where the tobacco is rolled in tendu also known as Diospyros melanoxylon leaves instead of
paper) in the village. To implement this resolution, the youth group performed
a unique "Holi"
ceremony twenty two years ago. The
festival of Holi is celebrated as a symbolic burning of evil. The youth group
brought all the tobacco, cigarettes, and beedies from the shops in the village
and burnt them in a Holi fire. Tobacco, cigarettes, or beedies are no longer
sold.
Grain Bank
In 1980, Hazare
started the Grain Bank at the temple, with the objective of providing food
security to needy farmers during times of drought or crop failure. Rich
farmers, or those with surplus grain production, could donate a quintal to the
bank. In times of need, farmers could borrow the grain, but they had to return
the amount of grain they borrowed, plus an additional quintal as an interest.
This ensured that nobody in the village ever went hungry or had to borrow money
to buy grain. This also prevented distress sales of grain at lower prices at
harvest time.
Watershed development programme
Ralegan Siddhi
is located in the foothills, so Hazare persuaded villagers to construct a watershed
embankment and associated works to stop water and allow it to percolate and
increase the ground water level and improve irrigation
in the area. These efforts solved the problem of water scarcity in the village
and made irrigation possible.
Cultivation of
water-intensive crops like sugarcane was banned. Crops such as pulses,
oilseeds, and
certain cash crops with low water requirements replaced them. The farmers
started growing high-yield varieties and changed cropping pattern. Hazare has
helped farmers of more than 70 villages in drought-prone regions in the state
of Maharashtra since 1975.
When Hazare came to Ralegan Siddhi in 1975 only 70 acres (28 ha) of land
was irrigated, Hazare converted it into about 2,500 acres (1,000 ha).
Education
In 1932, Ralegan
Siddhi got its first formal school, a single classroom primary school.[clarification needed] In 1962,
the villagers added more classrooms through community volunteer efforts. By
1971, out of an estimated population of 1,209, only 30.43% were literate (72
women and 290 men). Boys moved to the nearby towns of Shirur and Parner to pursue
higher education, but girls were limited to primary education. Hazare, along
with the youth of Ralegan Siddhi, worked to increase literacy rates and
education levels. In 1976 they started a pre-school and a high school in 1979.
The villagers formed a charitable trust, the Sant Yadavbaba Shikshan
Prasarak Mandal, which was registered in 1979.
Removal of untouchability
The social
barriers and discrimination that existed due to the caste system in India have been largely
eliminated by Ralegan Siddhi villagers. It was Hazare's moral leadership that
motivated and inspired the villagers to shun untouchability and
caste discrimination. Marriages of Dalits are held as part of community marriage program together
with those of other castes. The Dalits have become integrated into the social
and economic life of the village. The upper caste villagers built houses for
the lower caste Dalits by shramdaan and helped to repay their loans.
Gram Sabha
The Gandhian philosophy on rural development
considers the Gram Sabha as an important democratic institution
for collective decision-making in the villages of India.Hazare campaigned between 1998 and 2006 for amending the Gram Sabha Act, so
that villagers have a say in the village's development. The state government
initially refused, but eventually gave in to public pressure. It became
mandatory to seek the sanction of the Gram Sabha (an assembly of all village
adults, and not just the few elected representatives in the gram panchayat) for
expenditures on development works in the village.
Activism
Anti-corruption protests in Maharashtra
Anna Hazare
listening to the problems of people at Nanded, Maharashtra
Anna Hazare's
supporter's cap which reads "I am Anna Hazare"
In 1991 Hazare
launched the Bhrashtachar Virodhi Jan Andolan (BVJA, People's Movement against
Corruption), a popular movement to fight against corruptionin
Ralegaon Siddhi. In the same year he protested against the collusion between 40
forest officials and timber merchants. This protest resulted in the transfer
and suspension of these officials.
In May 1997
Hazare protested alleged malpractice in the purchase of powerlooms by the
Vasantrao Naik Bhathya Vimukt Jhtra Governor P.
C. Alexander.
On 4 November 1997 Gholap filed a defamation suit against Hazare for accusing
him of corruption. He was arrested in April 1998 and was released on a personal
bond of 5000 (US$80).On 9 September 1998 Hazare was imprisoned in the Yerawada Jail to serve a
three-month sentence mandated by the Mumbai Metropolitan Court
The sentencing caused leaders of all political parties except the BJP and the
Shiv Sena to support him.Later, due to public protests, the Government of Maharashtra ordered his
release. Hazare wrote a letter to then chief minister Manohar
Joshi demanding Gholap's removal for his role in alleged malpractices in
the Awami Merchant Bank.
Gholap resigned from the cabinet on 27 April 1999.
In 2003
corruption charges were raised by Hazare against four NCP ministers of the Congress-NCP government. He
started his fast unto death on 9 August 2003. He ended his fast
on 17 August 2003 after then chief minister Sushil Kumar Shinde formed a one-man commission
headed by the retired justice P. B.
Sawant to probe his charges. The
P. B. Sawant commission report, submitted on 23 February 2005, indicted Sureshdada
Jain, Nawab Malik, and Padmasinh Patil. The report exonerated
Vijaykumar Gavit. Jain and Malik resigned from the cabinet in March 2005
Three trusts
headed by Anna Hazare were also indicted in the P. B. Sawant commission report.
220000 (US$3,490) spent by the Hind
Swaraj Trust for Anna Hazare's birthday celebrations was concluded by the
commission as illegal and amounting to a corrupt practice,
though Abhay Firodia, an industrialist subsequently donated 248000 (US$3,940) to the trust for that
purpose.The setting apart of 11 acres of its land by the trust in favour of the Zilla Parishad without obtaining
permission from the charity commissioner was concluded as a case of
maladministration. The commission also concluded that the maintenance of
accounts of the Bhrashtachar Virodhi Janandolan Trust after 10 November
2001 had not been according to the rules and 46374 (US$740) spent by the Sant
Yadavbaba Shikshan Prasarak Mandal Trust for renovating a temple thwarted
its object of imparting secular education.
Right to Information movement
In the early
2000s Hazare led a movement in Maharashtra state which forced the state
government to enact a revised Maharashtra Right to Information Act. This Act
was later considered as the base document for the Right to Information Act 2005 (RTI),
enacted by the Union Government. It also ensured that the President of India
assented to this new Act.
On 20 July 2006
the Union Cabinet amended the Right to Information Act 2005 to exclude the file
noting by the government officials from its purview. Hazare began his fast
unto death on 9 August 2006 in Alandi against the proposed amendment. He ended his fast on 19
August 2006, after the government agreed to change its earlier decision.
Regulation of Transfers and Prevention of Delay in
Discharge of Official Duties Act
Before 2006 in
the state of Maharashtra, honest government officers were transferred to other
places according to ministerial wish, while some corrupt and favoured officials
stayed put for decades. Anna fought hard for a law whereby a government servant
must clear a file within a specified time and that transfers must take place
only after three years. After many years of Anna's relentless efforts, on 25
May 2006 Maharashtra issued a notification announcing the Prevention of Delay
in Discharge of Official Duties Act 2006. This act provided for disciplinary
action against officials who move files slowly and enabled monitoring of
officials who overstay a post, and for involvement in a corrupt nexus.
This act
mandated the government to effect transfers of all government officers and
employees, except Class IV workers, no sooner and no later than three years,
except in emergency or exceptional circumstances. Maharashtra was the first
state to have introduced such an act.
However, like others, this law was not fully followed.
Campaign against liquor from food grains
Article 47 of
India's Constitution commits the State to raise the standard of living, improve
public health and prohibit the consumption of intoxicating
drinks and drugs injurious to health.
In 2007
Maharashtra rolled out a grain-based liquor policy aimed to encourage
production of liquor from food grain in light of the rising demand for
spirits—used for industrial purposes and liquor. It issued 36 licenses for
distilleries for making alcohol from food grains.
Anna Hazare
opposed the government's policy to promote making liquor from food grains. He
argued that Maharashtra had to import food and referring to food grains
observed that promoting producing liquor from food grains was nappropriate.One of the State ministers Laxman Dhoble said in his speech that those opposing
the decision to allow use of food grains for the production of liquor were
anti-farmers and that opponents should be beaten with sugarcane sticks.
Hazare began fasting at Shirdi, but on 21 March 2010 the government promised to review
the policy and Anna ended his 5-day fast.But the government later granted 36 licences and grants of 10 (16¢ US) (per litre of alcohol)
to politicians or their sons who were engaged in making alcohol from
foodgrains. Recipients included Amit and Dheeraj Deshmukh, sons of Union Heavy
Industries Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh, Bharatiya Janata Party leader Gopinath
Munde's daughter Pankaja Palwe and her husband Charudatta Palwe,
sons-in-law of P.V. Narasimha Rao and Rajya Sabha MP Govindrao
Adik.The government approved the licenses despite stiff opposition from the planning
and finance departments, saying there was a huge demand in other countries for
distilled spirits compared to that of molasses.[
Anna sued Maharashtra over the policy in the
Nagpur bench of the Bombay High Court. On 20 August 2009 Maharashtra
stopped the policy. However, distilleries sanctioned before that date and those
who started production within two years of sanction were entitled for
subsidies.
On 5 May 2011
court refused to hear the suit, saying, "not before me, this is a court of
law, not a court of justice" as a reason for not hearing the plea.[
A Maharashtra Principal Secretary, C.S. Sangeet Rao, stated that no law existed
to scrap these licences.
Lokpal Bill movement
Anna Hazare's
hunger strike at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi.
Main article: 2011 Indian anti-corruption
movement
In 2011, Hazare
participated in the satyagraha movement campaigning for the passing a stronger
anti-corruption Lokpal (ombudsman) bill in the Indian parliament. Known as the Jan
Lokpal Bill (People's Ombudsman Bill), this had been drafted by N.
Santosh Hegde, a former justice of the Supreme Court of India and Lokayukta of Karnataka, Prashant
Bhushan, a senior lawyer in the Supreme Court and Arvind
Kejriwal, a social activist, along with members of the India Against Corruption movement. The
draft incorporated more stringent provisions and gave wider power to the Lokpal
than the government's 2010 draft.
These included placing "the Prime Minister within the ambit of the
proposed lokpal's powers".
Hunger strike
Hazare began an
"indefinite
fast"[ on
5 April 2011 at Jantar Mantar in Delhi as part of the
campaign to form a joint committee comprising government and civil society
representatives. He wanted this committee to draft a bill that had more
stringent penal provisions and gave more independence to the Lokpal and Lokayuktas
(ombudsmen in the states). The fast came after his demand was rejected by the
prime minister, Manmohan Singh.
Hazare said, "I will fast until Jan Lokpal Bill is passed".
The movement
attracted attention in the media, and thousands of supporters. Almost 150
people reportedly joined Hazare in his fast.
Social activists, including Medha Patkar, Arvind
Kejriwal, former IPS officer Kiran Bedi,
and Jayaprakash Narayan lent their
support. People showed support in social media. In addition to spiritual
leaders Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, Swami
Ramdev, Swami Agnivesh, the former Indian cricketer Kapil Dev
and many other celebrities supported him.[72][73]
Hazare decided that he would not allow any politician to sit with him. The
protesters rejected Uma Bharti, Om Prakash Chautala and others when they
visited the protest On
6 April 2011 Sharad Pawar resigned from the group of ministers
formed for reviewing the 2010 draft.
Protests spread
to Bangalore,
Mumbai, Chennai, Ahmedabad, Guwahati, Shillong, Aizawl and other
cities.
On 8 April 2011
the Government accepted the movement's demands. On 9 April it issued a
notification in the Gazette of India on formation of a joint
committee. It accepted the formula that it should be co-chaired by a politician
and an social activist. The notification stated, "The Joint Drafting
Committee shall consist of five nominee ministers of the Government of India
and five nominees of the civil society. The five nominee Ministers of the
Government of India are Pranab Mukherjee, Union Minister of Finance, P.
Chidambaram, Union Minister of Home Affairs, M.
Veerappa Moily, Union Minister of Law and Justice, Kapil Sibal,
Union Minister of Human Resource and Development and Minister of Communication
and Information Technology and Salman
Khursheed, Union Minister of Water Resources and Minister of Minority
Affairs. The five non-politician nominees were Anna Hazare, N.
Santosh Hegde, Shanti Bhushan Senior Advocate, Prashant
Bhushan, Advocate and Arvind Kejriwal.
On the morning
of 9 April 2011 Hazare ended his 98-hour hunger strike. He addressed the people
and set a deadline of 15 August 2011 to pass the bill. He said that
Real fight
begins now. We have a lot of struggle ahead of us in drafting the new
legislation, We have shown the world in just five days that we are united for
the cause of the nation. The youth power in this movement is a sign of hope.
Hazare said
that if the bill did not pass he would call for a mass nation-wide agitation.
He called his movement as "second struggle for independence" and he will
continue the fight.
Hazare
threatened on 28 July 2012 to proceed with his fast-unto-death from the next
day on the Jan Lokpal Bill issue. He also stated that country's future is not safe
in the hands of Congress and BJP and he would campaign in the coming elections
for those with clean background.On
the third day of his indefinite fast, Anna stated that he will not talk even to
the Prime Minister till his demands are met. On
2 August 2012 Hazare said that there was nothing wrong with forming a new
political party but, he would neither join the party nor contest elections.
Team and Anna have decided to end their indefinite fast on 3 August 2012 at 5PM
after which the team will announce their decision to enter politics.
Draft bill
During the
meeting of the joint drafting committee on 30 May 2011, the Union government
members opposed the inclusion of the prime minister, higher judiciary and the
acts of the MPs under the purview of the JanLokpal in the
draft bill.[On 31 May, Mukherjee sent a letter to the chief ministers of all states and party leaders
seeking their opinion on six contentious issues, including whether to bring the
prime minister and judges of India's Supreme Court and High Courts under the
law's purview. But
the civil society members of the drafting committee considered that keeping
them out would be a violation of the United Nations Convention
against Corruption.
Hazare and
other civil society members decided to boycott 6 June 2011 drafting committee
meeting to protest the forcible eviction of Swami
Ramdev and his followers by the Delhi Police from Ramlila
Maidan on 5 June 2011, while they were on a hunger strike against black
money and corruption and doubting the government's seriousness.
On 6 June 2011,
the civil society members wrote to Mukherjee, explaining reasons for their
absence and also asking government to go public on the major issues. They also
decided to attend only future meetings that were telecast live.
On 8 June at Rajghat, describing his movement as the second freedom struggle,
Hazare criticised the Government for trying to discredit the drafting committee
and threatened to go on indefinite fast again from 16 August 2011 if the Lokpal
Bill had not passed. He also criticised the Government for putting hurdles in
front of the Bill and for maligning the civil society members.
Indefinite fast
India Against Corruption campaign in
Whitefield, Bangalore.
On 28 July 2011
the union cabinet approved a draft of the Lokpal Bill, which kept the Prime
Minister, judiciary and lower bureaucracy out of the ombudsman's ambit. Hazare
rejected the government version by describing it as "cruel joke" and
wrote a letter to Singh announcing his decision to begin an indefinite fast
from 16 August 2011 at Jantar Mantar, if the government introduced its own
version of the bill without taking suggestions from civil society members.Hazare wrote:-
Why are you
(government) sending the wrong draft? We have faith in Parliament. But first
send the right draft, our agitation is against government, not Parliament. The
government has overlooked many points. How will it fight corruption by
excluding government employees, CBI and prime minister from the Lokpal's
purview? We were told that both the drafts would be sent to the Cabinet. But
only the government's draft was sent. This is a deceitful government. They are
lying. How will they run the country? Now I have no trust in this government.
If it is really serious about fighting corruption, why is it not bringing
government employees and CBI under Lokpal?
Within twenty
four hours of cabinet's endorsement of a weak Lokpal Bill, over ten thousand
people from across the country sent faxes directly to the government demanding a stronger bill.[
The Mumbai Taxi Men's Union, comprising over 30,000 taxi drivers supported
Hazare's fast by keeping all taxis off the roads on 16 August.
Lawyers of Allahabad High Court described the government
proposal as against the national interest and pledged their support to Hazare
by hunger striking at Allahabad on 16 August.On 30 July Vishwa Hindu Parishad supported his fast by
saying movement for an effective anti-corruption ombudsman needed the people's
backing.
On 1 August
2011, Public interest litigation was filed in
the Supreme Court of India by Hemant Patil, a
Maharashtra-based social worker and businessman, to restrain Hazare, alleging
that Hazare's demands were unconstitutional and amounted to interference in the
legislative process.
Arrest and aftermath
On 16 August
2011, Hazare was arrested, four hours before the planned indefinite hunger
strike
Rajan Bhagat, spokesman for Delhi Police, said police arrested Hazare for
illegally gathering in a Delhi park to begin his hunger strike, claiming that
Hazare refused to meet police conditions for allowing the protest.
The conditions included restricting the fast to three days and the number of
protesters to 5,000. Later in the afternoon, Hazare refused bail. The
magistrate dispatched him to Tihar
jail for seven days.
After announcements by Prashant Bhushan, local television, and social media
sites (including Facebook), thousands marched in support from the India Gate
to Jantar
Mantar.
A special cloud call centre named "Call Anna" was set up by BigV
Telecom as part of their Corporate social responsibility
which remains active to this day.
Media reported
that about 1,300 supporters were detained in Delhi, including key members of
the India Against Corruption movement such as Arvind
Kejriwal, Shanti Bhushan, Kiran Bedi
and Manish
Sisodia.
Other reports other protests with people courting arrests in different parts of
the country. Opposition parties came out against the arrest, likening the
government action to the emergency imposed in the country in 1975.
Both houses of Parliament adjourned over the issue.
After four
hours in detention he was released unconditionally on a request by the police,
but refused to leave Tihar Jail.
He demanded unconditional permission to fast at Ramlila Maidan (Ground) and
refused to leave.
Hazare continued his fast inside the jail.
After his
arrest, Hazare received support from people across the country. There were
reports of "nearly 570 demonstrations and protests by Anna supporters
across the country".Due to the millions of protesters nationwide,
the government allowed him to begin a public hunger strike of fifteen days.
After talks with public authorities, Hazare decided to hold his protest at Ramlila Maidan, New Delhi.On 20 August Hazare "left the Tihar Jail for the Ramlila Grounds".
Hazare promised reporters "he would fight to the 'last breath' until the
government gets his team's Jan Lokpal Bill passed in this session of Parliament,
which ends on 8 September."
Fast at Ramlila Maidan
Anna Hazare on
fast unto death protest.
On 20 August
2011 thousands came to show their support for Hazare,while "his advisers made television appearances to rally public support
and defend themselves against criticism that their protest campaign and refusal
to compromise is undermining India's parliamentary process."
The National Campaign for People's Right to Information (NCPRI) condemned
Hazare's deadline for passing the bill as undermining democracy, which operates
by
"holding
wide-ranging consultations and discussions, allowing for dissent and evolving a
consensus. ...He [Hazare] has the right to protest and dissent. But nobody can
claim it as an absolute right and deny the right of dissent to others."
The Congress
party confirmed that Maharashtra Additional Chief Secretary (Home) Umesh
Chandra Sarangi (who has a history of mediating between Hazare and officials)
was meeting with him again "to find points of consensus and defuse the
situation".
On 21 August "tens of thousands" watched Hazare as he sat on an
elevated platform.
It was reported that Hazare at that point had "lost more than seven pounds
since beginning his fast". Despite this he stated, "I will not
withdraw my hunger strike until the Jan Lokpal bill is passed in the
Parliament. I can die but I will not bend."
Hazare ended his fast on 28 August, after the Lokpal Bill passed unanimously.
He was admitted
to Medanta Medicity, Gurgaon for post-fast care.
He had lost 7.5 kilograms (17 lb)
and was very dehydrated after the 288-hour fast.
I Am Anna Chant
Within a few
days of Anna Hazare's first fast demanding a strong Lokpal (on 5 April 2011),
supporters started a campaign known as "I Am Anna Hazare", which was
similar to the "We Are All Khaled Said" campaign from the Egyptian
uprising.
During Anna Hazare's second fast, his topi, the cap which became
synonymous with Anna Hazare, became almost a fashion statement.
Sales of the topis hit an all-time high.Kiran Bedi
recommended that the "I am Anna" topi be displayed whenever someone
asked for a bribe.
Fast on MMRDA ground
On 27 December
2011, Hazare began a 3-day hunger strike at MMRDA grounds, Bandra Kurla Complex, to demand a stronger
Lokpal bill than was in debate.Hazare ended the fast on 28 December, after his doctors said that his kidneys
might fail if he continued
Before reaching
the venue, Anna paid tribute to Mahatma Gandhi at Juhu Beach.
On his way to a rally with several thousand people,he took two-and-half hours to reach the ground, passing through Santacruz,
Tulip Star Hotel, Mithibai College, SV Road, Vile Parle,
Khar
and Bandra Highway.
A PIL petition
filed against the fast was turned down by the Karnataka High Court. A judge
noted that there was no public interest in the petition.
Electoral reform movement
In 2011, Hazare
demanded an amendment to the electoral law to incorporate the option of None
of the above in the electronic voting machines during the
Indian elections.
The "None of the above (NOTA)" is a ballot option that allows an
electorate to indicate disapproval of all of the candidates in an electoral
system, in case of non-availability of any candidate of his choice, as his Right
to Reject. Soon, the Chief Election Commissioner of India Shahabuddin Yaqoob Quraishi supported
Hazare's demand for the electoral reforms.
On 31 March
2013 Hazare started Jantantra Yatra from the city of Amritsar. He is
excepting to address various issues, including electoral reforms such as the
right to reject a candidate.
Protest against atrocities against Swami Ramdev and his
supporters
On 8 June 2011
Anna Hazare and thousands of his supporters fasted from 10 am to 6 pm
at Rajghat to protest against the
midnight crackdown of 5 June by the Delhi Police on Swami Ramdev's fast at
Ramlila ground protests.
Anna Hazare held the Prime Minister of India responsible for the atrocities and termed the police action as an attempt to stifle democracy.
According to one of Hazard's young supporters, the large presence of youths at
the protest was due to his use of nonviolent protest, similar to Gandhi.
On 9 August
2013, Anna's office announced his anti-corruption organisation Bhrashtachar
Virodhi Jan Andolan (BVJA) is no longer tackling corruption issues at a
personal or social level. In an email circulated to India Against Corruption's membership, the
veteran Gandhian's office has clarified that Anna "is now focused on
Janlokpal, Right to Reject, Right to Recall, Farmers problems, Change in Education
in System".
2015 Land acquisition ordinance protest
In February
2015, he protested for two days at Jantar Mantar in Delhi against ordinance on
the Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013.
Controversies and criticism
Alleged link with Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh
Hazare has been
criticised for being an agent of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) a
right-wing Hindu
body.
According to Digvijay Singh a senior leader of the Indian National Congress, the entire
crusade of 2011 Indian anti-corruption
movement was planned by RSS in which Plan-A was Baba Ramdev while Plan-B
was Anna Hazare. Their basic job was to disturb national security.
Further Singh had charged Hazare for having links with late RSS leader Nanaji
Deshmukh
with whom he worked as a secretary.
*Hazare denied any such associations.
Views on Narendra Modi and Nitish Kumar
In a press
conference in April 2011, Hazare praised Narendra
Modi, the chief minister of Gujarat and Nitish
Kumar, chief minister of Bihar for their efforts on rural development, saying that other
chief ministers should emulate them.
Subsequently, Modi wrote an open letter to him, hailing him as a Gandhian
anti-corruption activist
while Digvijay Singh criticised him for his comment.
In May 2011, during his visit to Gujarat, Hazare changed his view and
criticised Modi for rampant corruption. He urged Modi to appoint a Lokayukta. He
also commented that the media had projected an incorrect image of Vibrant
Gujarat.Subsequently, Hazare declared that Modi is not a suitable candidate for the
position of Prime Minister for not doing enough to curb corruption and his
unwillingness to set up a Lokayukta in Gujarat.He has even questioned his secular credentials.
Accusations of corruption
The government
of the state of Maharashtra instituted a Commission of Inquiry under Justice PB
Sawant in September 2003 to enquire into allegations of corruption against
several people, including four ministers in the state as well as the "Hind
Swaraj Trust" headed by Hazare. The Commission submitted its report on 22
February 2005, indicting the Trust for corruptly spending Rs. 220,000 on
Hazare's birthday celebrations.
Two days ahead
of Hazare's Lokpal fast, the Indian National Congress, attacked him, alleging
that "the moral core of Hazare has been ripped apart" by the Justice
P B Sawant Commission.
Hazare's lawyer
Milind Pawar responded that the commission had remarked about
"irregularities" in the accounts, but had not held him guilty of any
"corrupt" practices. Pawar said that on 16 June 1998, a celebration
was organised to congratulate Hazare on winning an award from a US–based NGO
and it coincided with his 61st birthday. The trust spent Rs 218,000 for the
function. Abhay Phirodia, a Pune-based industrialist, who took the initiative
to organise this function donated an amount of Rs 248,950 to the trust by
cheque soon afterwards.Hazare dared the government to file a First Information Report (FIR) against him
to prove the charges.
Accusation of being anti-democratic and anti-Dalit
An article
written in Kolkata Telegraph by Ramchandra
Guha stated that that environmental journalist Mukul Sharma claimed that
Hazare forced the Dalit families in Ralegan Siddhi to adopt a vegetarian diet,
and that those who violated the decree were tied to a post and flogged.
Mukul Sharma also found that no panchayat elections have been held in the
village for the past two decades, and that no campaigning was allowed during
state and national elections, upon Hazare's instructions.
Dalit columnist Chandrabhan Prasad opined that Hazare's
anti-corruption movement rejected representative democracy and alleged that it
was an upper-caste uprising. He also claimed that centralising powers in
Lokapal, which was a non-elected entity, was anti-democratic.[citation needed]
Dalit activist Kancha
Ilaiah commented in a similar fashion, that "The Anna movement is an
anti-social justice, manuvadi movement. The Dalits, tribals, OBCs and
minorities have nothing to do with it. We oppose it."
Activist Anoop Kheri claimed that "The language, symbols used by the
movement clearly reflects its upper caste Hindu nature, a very
rightwing Hindu patriotism is being used to get the entire country against
corruption. And as a dalit, I have a problem with it."
There was also
an allegation that an RTI activist was denied permission to protest by having a
fast-unto-death at Ralegan Siddhi, the grama sabha stating that the
reason was that only Hazare can hold such fasts in his village.
Activist Udit Raj was
denied permission to protest against Hazare, whom he claimed was against
parliamentary processes.[citation needed] Raj warned
that succumbing to Hazare's demands would set a dangerous trend rendering the
"backward" classes more vulnerable. He claimed that mass
mobilisations coerced the government into a "set of solutions"
against constitutional processes could be used against affirmative action and threatened democracy.
Later, it came
to light that poor dalits had been paid up to 200 each to shout slogans against
Hazare, although the organizers denied it. Some protesters said that they had
been told that it was a pro-Anna protest, but felt cheated after realising that
it was against Hazare.
Accusation of being anti-Muslim
On 22 August
2011 writer-actor Arundhati Roy accused Hazare in a newspaper article
of being nonsecular. She questioned his secular credentials, pointing out his
"support for Raj Thackeray's Marathi Manoos xenophobia
and [has praised] the 'development model' of Gujarat's CM who oversaw the 2002 pogrom against Muslims". The
website of the newspaper published many responses to her article and these were
mostly critical of her views.Activist Medha Patkar criticised Roy, saying that her views
were misplaced.
Hazare in the
past stood in firm opposition to the Shiv Sena
and BJP governments in Maharashtra. Activist and writer Asghar Ali Engineer in
an EPW article on Communalism and Communal Violence reported,
The Shiv Sena
is also facing serious problems from the social activist Anna Hazare who has
accused its ministers of corruption and demanded their resignation. The SS-BJP
government is facing serious corruption charges and is greatly worried. The
Anna Hazare movement began in late November when he went on fast against the
corrupt practices of the Shiv Sena ministers. The BJP initially supported the
Hazare movement and now its deputy chief minister Gopinath Munde is also under
a cloud. Initially the Hazare movement had created a rift between the Shiv Sena
and the BJP but with Gopinath Munde himself under a cloud, both may close
ranks. The Hazare movement has certainly posed a great challenge for the
saffron government at the end of 1996.
Hazare was
accused of working for RSS and BJP's behest, and against Muslims by cleric
Bukhari of the Jama Masjid. Bhukhari was subsequently criticised for being a
Royal Imam and for claiming that his personal views represented the view of
ordinary Muslims.
Conspiracy to murder Hazare
Hazare exposed
corruption in cooperative sugar factories in Maharashtra, including one
controlled by Dr.Padamsinh Bajirao Patil, a member of
Parliament of 15th Lok Sabha and higher-ranking Leader of Nationalist Congress Party from Osmanabad.
Patil was accused in the 2006 murder case of Congress leader Pawanraje
Nimabalkar.
The conspiracy
to kill Hazare was exposed when Parasmal Jain, an accused in the Nimbalkar
murder case, in his written confession before a magistrate said that Patil had
paid him 3000000 (US$47,620) to murder
Nimbalkar, and also offered him supari (contract killing sum) to kill Anna
Hazare.
After this written confession, Hazard appealed to the state government of
Maharashtra to lodge a separate First Information Report ( FIR ) against
Patil but the government declined. On 26 September 2009 Hazare lodged his own
complaint at Parner
police station of Ahmednagar District in Maharashtra against Patil.
Patil approached the High Court seeking anticipatory
bail but on 14 October 2009, the Aurangabad bench of Bombay
High Court rejected his application, observing that there was prima facie
case against him.Padmasinh Patil appealed to the Supreme Court of India losing again, on 6
November 2009.On 11 November 2009 Patil surrendered before the sessions court in Latur and was sent to
judicial remand for 14 days.
On 16 December 2009 the Aurangabad bench granted bail.As of 16 August 2011, the verdict is pending.
As of December
2011, Hazare received Z+ security.
Honours, awards and international recognition
Year
|
Award
|
Awarding organisation
|
2013
|
Allard Prize for International Integrity
|
|
2011
|
||
2008
|
||
2005
|
||
2003
|
Integrity Award
|
|
1999
|
Leading Social Contributor Award
|
|
1998
|
CARE International Award
|
|
1997
|
Mahaveer Award
|
|
1996
|
Shiromani Award
|
|
1992
|
||
1990
|
||
1989
|
Krushi Bhushana Award
|
|
1986
|
Film
The Marathi
language film Mala anna vhaychay (I want to become Anna) is based on
Hazare's work. The role of Hazare has been played by Arun
Nalawade.
Personal life
Hazare is
unmarried. He has lived in a small room attached to the Sant Yadavbaba temple
in Ralegan
Siddhi since 1975. On 16 April 2011, he declared his bank balance of 67183 (US$1,070) and 1500 (US$20) as money in hand.
He owns 0.07 hectares of family land in Ralegan Siddhi, which is being used by
his brothers. He donated for village use two other pieces of land donated to
him by the Indian Army and by a villager.
Writings
- Hazare, Anna; Ganesh Pangare, Vasudha Lokur (1996). Adarsh Gaon Yojana: Government Participitation in a Peoples Program: Ideal Village Project of the Government of Maharashtra. Hind Swaraj Trust. p. 95. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
- Hazare, Anna. My Village – My Sacred Land. New Delhi: CAPART.
- Hazare, Anna (1997). Ralegaon Siddhi: A Veritable Transformation. Translated by B.S. Pendse. Ralegan Siddhi Pariwar Prakashan,. Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 7 April 2011.
- Hazare, Anna (2007). वाट ही संघर्षाची (in Marathi). Pune: Signet Publications.
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