The word "
Lokpal" is derived from the sanskrit word "
loka"
meaning people and "pala" meaning protector or caretaker. Together it means "
protector
of people". The aim of passing such a law is it to eradicate corruption at
all levels of the Indian polity. For a nation to develop it needs to have an
extremely well organized and meticulously planned organization.
A failure of the administrative set up reflects on the holistic growth of the
state, the biggest reason for the failure of the administration can be
attributed to the ill effects of corruption. The growth of the country has been
plagued by corruption and it has extended its wings through out the entire
administrative set up. To root out the menace of corruption the institution of
"ombudsman" came up and has played a great role in fighting administrative
malpractices.
Historical Background
The institution of ombudsman originated in scandinavian countries. The
institution of ombudsman first came into being in sweden in 1713 when a
"chancellor of justice" was appointed by the king to act as an invigilator to
look into the functioning of a war time government. From 1713 the duty of this
ombudsman was to mainly ensure the correct conduct of royal officials. The
institution of the ombudsman was firmly incorporated into the Swedish
constitution from 1809.
It was defined as the parliamentary body supervising judges, government and
other officials, and ensuring their compliance with laws and other legal
regulations.
The embedding of the ombudsman in the constitution was completed by a further
law specifying in greater detail the scope of his activities and his legal
authority.The institution of the ombudsman developed and grew most significantly
in the 20th century. Ombudsman institutions were on the increase especially in
the period after the Second World War when almost a hundred of them were
established. The institutions took varied forms and modifications depending on
the historical, political and social background of the given country.
In India the ombudsman is known as lokpal or lokayukata.The concept of
constitutional ombudsman was first proposed by the then law minister Ashok Kumar
Sen in parliament in the early 1960s.The term lokpal and lokayukta were coined
by Dr.L.M.Singhvi as the indian model of ombudsman for the redressal of public
grievances,it was passed in loksabha In the year 1968 but it was lapsed with
dissolution of lok sabha and since then has lapsed in the lok sabha many times.
Need For Lokpal
There are several deficiencies in our anti-corruption systems because of which
despite overwhelming evidence against the corrupt, no honest investigation and
prosecution takes place and the corrupt are hardly punished. The whole
anti-corruption set up ends up protecting the corrupt.
- Lack of Independence Most of our agencies like CBI, state vigilance
departments, internal vigilance wings of various departments,
Anti-corruption Branch of state police etc are not independent. In many
cases, they have to report to the same people who are either themselves
accused or are likely to be influenced by the accused.
- Powerless Some bodies like CVC or Lokayuktas are independent, but they
do not have any powers. They have been made advisory bodies. They give two
kinds of advise to the governments to either impose departmental penalties
on any officer or to prosecute him in court. Experience shows that whenever
any minister or a senior officer is involved, their advice is rarely
followed.
- Lack of Transparency and internal accountability In addition, there is
the problem of internal transparency and accountability of these
anti-corruption agencies. Presently, there isnt any separate and effective
mechanism to check if the staff of these anti-corruption agencies turns
corrupt. That is why, despite so many agencies, corrupt people rarely go to
jail. Corruption has become a high profit zero risk business. There is
absolutely no deterrence against corruption.
- Lack of Transparency and internal accountability In addition, there is
the problem of internal transparency and accountability of these
anti-corruption agencies. Presently, there isnt any separate and effective
mechanism to check if the staff of these anti-corruption agencies turns
corrupt. That is why, despite so many agencies, corrupt people rarely go to
jail. Corruption has become a high profit zero risk business. There is
absolutely no deterrence against corruption. Our anti-corruption laws also
have several critical deficiencies, which end up protecting the corrupt.
Lokpal and Lokayukta Act, 2013
The Lokpal and Lokayukta Act, 2013 seeks to provide for the establishment of
Lokpal for the Union and Lokayukta for States to inquire into allegations of
corruption against certain public functionaries and for related matters. The act
extends to whole of India, including Jammu & Kashmir and is applicable to
"public servants" within and outside India.
The act mandates for creation of Lokpal for Union and Lokayukta for states. The
Bill was tabled in the Lok Sabha on 22 December 2011 and was passed by the House
on 27 December as The Lokpal and Lokayuktas Bill, 2011. It was subsequently
tabled in the Rajya Sabha on 29 December. After a marathon debate that stretched
until midnight of the following day, the vote failed to take place for lack of
time.
On 21 May 2012, it was referred to a Select Committee of the Rajya Sabha for
consideration. It was passed in the Rajya Sabha on 17 December 2013 after making
certain amendments to the earlier Bill and in the Lok Sabha the next day. It
received assent from President Pranab Mukherjee on 1 January 2014 and came into
force from 16 January.
Structure of Lokpal
The institution of Lokpal is a statutory body without any constitutional
backing. Lokpal is a multimember body, made up of one chairperson and maximum of
8 members.The person who is to be appointed as the chairperson of the Lokpal
should be either the former Chief Justice of India Or the former Judge of
Supreme Court Or an eminent person with impeccable integrity and outstanding
ability, having special knowledge and expertise of minimum 25 years in the
matters relating to anti-corruption policy, public administration, vigilance,
finance including insurance and banking, law and management.
Out of the maximum eight members, half will be judicial members. Minimum fifty
per cent of the Members will be from SC / ST / OBC / Minorities and women. The
judicial member of the Lokpal should be either a former Judge of the Supreme
Court or a former Chief Justice of a High Court. The non-judicial member should
be an eminent person with impeccable integrity and outstanding ability, having
special knowledge and expertise of minimum 25 years in the matters relating to
anti-corruption policy, public administration, vigilance, finance including
insurance and banking, law and management.
The members are appointed by the president on the recommendation of a selection
committee. The selection committee is composed of the Prime Minister who is the
Chairperson; Speaker of Lok Sabha ,Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha ,Chief
Justice of India or a Judge nominated by him / her, and One eminent jurist.
Jurisdiction of Lokpal
The jurisdiction of the Lokpal will include the Prime Minister except on
allegations of corruption relating to international relations, security, the
public order, atomic energy and space and unless a Full Bench of the Lokpal and
at least two-thirds of members approve an inquiry.
It will be held in-camera and if the Lokpal so desires, the records of the
inquiry will not be published or made available t anyone. The Lokpal will also
have jurisdiction over Ministers and MPs but not in the matter of anything said
in Parliament or a vote given there. Lokpals jurisdiction will cover all
categories of public servants.
Group A, B, C or D officers defined as such under the Prevention of Corruption
Act, 1988 will be covered under the Lokpal but any corruption complaint against
Group A and B officers, after inquiry, will come to the Lokpal. However, in the
case of Group C and D officers, the Chief Vigilance Commissioner will
investigate and report to the Lokpal.
However, it provides adequate protection for honest and upright Public
Servants.Also any person who is or has been in charge (director / manager/
secretary) of anybody / society set up by central act or any other body financed
/ controlled by central government and any other person involved in act of
abetting, bribe giving or bribe taking.
Salient features of The Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013:
- The Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013 provided for Lokpal at the centre
having jurisdiction of trying cases of corruption against all Members of
Parliament and central government employees. The Lokayuktas have functions
similar to the Lokpal, but they function on a state level.
- The office of the Lokpal and Lokayuktas deals with charges of corruption
against any public official and includes the office of the prime minister of
the court but with reasonable safeguards. Both the Lokpal and the Lokayukta
deal with charges of corruption against the government and its employees, in
fact they even conduct investigations and based on the findings from such
investigations they conduct trials.
- The act lays down the provision to set up a Lokayukta and its set of
powers for each state without clearly defining the extent of the same, this
has led to various different Lokayuktas being setup, some with more power
than the others. In order to create uniformity a proposal to implement the
Lokayukta uniformly across Indian states has been made.
The Act provides that all states set up office of the Lokpal and/or
Lokayukta within one year from the commencement of the said Act.On the other
hand, Lokpal will consist of a chairperson and a maximum of eight members,
of which 50% will be judicial members, 50% members of Lokpal shall be from
SC/ST/OBCs, minorities and women.
- The newly enacted Lokpal Act provides for confiscation and attachment of
any property of any government official which he or she has come to own
through corrupt practices and the same can be done during pendency of
proceedings against the said official.
- The Lokpal Act mandates that all public officials should furnish the
assets and liabilities of themselves as well as their respective dependents.
In fact the said Act even guarantees protection to any government official
who acts as a whistle blower and as an ancillary a Whistle Blowers
Protection Act has also been enacted.
Powers of Lokpal:
- It has powers to superintendence over, and to give direction to CBI.
- If it has referred a case to CBI, the investigating officer in such case
cannot be transferred without approval of Lokpal.
- Powers to authorize CBI for search and seizure operations connected to
such case.
- The Inquiry Wing of the Lokpal has been vested with the powers of a
civil court.
- Lokpal has powers of confiscation of assets, proceeds, receipts and
benefits arisen or procured by means of corruption in special circumstances
- Lokpal has the power to recommend transfer or suspension of public
servant connected with allegation of corruption.
- Lokpal has power to give directions to prevent destruction of records
during preliminary inquiry.
Conclusion
The institution of lokpal has been a land mark move in the history of Indian
polity, The lokpal and lokayukta act 2013 has offered a productive solution to
combat the never ending menace of corruption.
The institution of lokpal has tried to bring a much needed change in the battle
against corruption in the administrative structure of India but at the same time
there are loopholes and lacunae which need to be corrected. Firstly it is not
free from political influence as the appointing committee itself consist ofÂ
parliamentarians There is no criteria to decide who is an eminent jurist or a
person of integrity. Thus, this appointment can easily be manipulated.
Further, the act provides no concrete immunity to the whistle blowers. The
provision for initiation of inquiry against the complainant if the accused is
found innocent will only discourage people from complaining. Also, there is no
foolproof way to determine whether the person who is appointed as the Lokpal
will remain honest throughout.
The biggest lacuna is the exclusion of judiciary from the ambit of the Lokpal.
The Lokpal is also not given a constitutional backing. There are no adequate
provisions for appeal against the Lokpal. The powers, composition and scope of
Lokayuktas do not find any mention of the act. There is a long way to go toÂ
ensure transparency and crusade against corruption are still on and yet to reach
its destination.
End Notes:
- lawmantra.co.in/concept-of-lokpal/
- www.ombudsman.wa.gov.au/About_Us/History.htm
- www.thehindu.com/news/national/all-you-need-to...lokpal.../article18254568.ece
- ccis.nic.in/WriteReadData/CircularPortal/D2/.../407_06_2013-AVD-IV-09012014.pdfv)https://www.ndtv.com India
- https://www.iasgs.com Governance
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