One example of this was acted out in Karnataka recently. The passing
of an amendment to the Panchayat Raj Act giving MLAs powers over
gram sabhas and panchayats that runs contrary to the spirit
of decentralisation and the Constitution itself. If this amendment
becomes law – the price we pay will be our right as rural voters to
participate directly in local self government in Karnataka. We will
lose the
only forum we have, the gram sabha, to exercise our right to choose
beneficiaries for all government-funded programmes.
This could also become a precedent to further curtail other rights
of panchayati raj institutions in the state. This disturbing event,
the hurried passage of amendments to the Panchayat Raj Act by both
houses of the legislature, virtually passed unnoticed by the media
though there was pandemonium in both
houses. In the legislative assembly, the opposition staged a walk
out that actually helped the passage of the amendment. In the
legislative council, the vote was evenly split, and was followed by
chairman
B K Chandrasekhar exercising his casting vote in favour of the
government.
Weak Implementation
Some background on the panchayat raj legislation in the state is
required to understand the damage this amendment will cause to local
government in Karnataka. On close examination it is clear that
panchayati
raj is being stymied at every turn. A popular notion is that the law
is weak in this regard, the natural consequence of the Article 243G
giving flexibility to states to determine the ambit of devolution to
panchayats. However, a closer examination of facts shows that this
is incorrect – in fact, most states have passed strong laws, but
these are weakly implemented. On the other hand, the means adopted
to
institutionally weaken panchayati raj are not through the law, but
through executive actions ranging from the crude to the subtle. All
have one striking similarity – they have been quite effective so
far.
Gram sabhas have been given a unique position as institutions of
participatory governance under the Constitution. Article 243A
defines a gram sabha as being a body of voters (citizens) of a
village
within a panchayat. Under the constitutional pattern, gram sabhas
provide the platform for citizens to participate in local governance
beyond casting their vote and partake in decisions regarding their
village and is the foundation for effective participatory self
governance or panchayat raj.
The Karnataka Panchayat Raj Act 1993 initially had provided for
relatively weak gram sabhas. Under Section 3 of the Act, gram sabhas
were to meet at least once in six months and if gram panchayats
failed to convene them, the executive officer of the concerned taluk
panchayat was authorised to do so. Then the gram sabha only had
recommendatory powers under the law. The law also provided that in
case the gram sabha failed to identify beneficiaries for schemes
within a reasonable time, the executive officer shall, in
consultation with the gram panchayat, identify such beneficiaries.
Obviously, there was low confidence about the capacity and interest
of gram sabhas and they were routinely ignored by higher levels.
In 2001, M Y Ghorpade, then Karnataka’s minister of rural
development and panchayat raj (RDPR) constituted a working group
under the chairpersonship of the development commissioner, N
Viswanathan to make recommendations on panchayat raj reform. In its
report submitted in February 2002, the working
group recommended several measures for strengthening gram sabhas.
These recommendations included changes in the law to provide for
ward sabhas at the neighbourhood level below gram sabhas. An
elaborate process for beneficiary selection by ward and gram sabhas
for government programmes was also suggested. Amendments based on
these recommendations were intensely debated both outside and within
the legislature. In mid-2003, while presenting the draft amendment
bill to the assembly, Ghorpade
himself suggested that they should be examined by a joint select
committee (JSC). After a detailed examination by the JSC, the bill
was passed unanimously by both houses of the legislature in
September 2003. The Act, a tribute to the wisdom and statesmanship
of Ghorpade, was uniformly acknowledged as a big step forward,
putting Karnataka in the forefront of good panchayat raj practice.
The landmark changes brought about in 2003, apart from establishing
a two-tier system of ward and gramsabhas for effective and greater
people’s participation also listed as many as 29 functions for them,
including approval of annual plans, generating proposals and
determining priority of schemes, identifying beneficiaries, water
supply and streetlight arrangements and promoting adult education.
In respect of beneficiary selection the new law left no room for
doubt. Section 3(3)(b) of the amended Act provided that ward sabhas
would identify the most eligible persons from its area for
beneficiary oriented
schemes on the basis of fixed criteria and prepare lists of eligible
beneficiaries in order of priority and forward it to the gram
panchayat. These lists were then to be placed by the gram panchayat
before the
gram sabha, which under Section 3A(3)(c) would consider the ward
sabha lists and prepare the final lists of eligible beneficiaries in
order of priority. For good measure, the law also provided that once
such detailed beneficiary lists were prepared by the gram sabha they
could not be changed by any higher authority.
Reversal
Last week’s amendment has set the clock back in no uncertain terms.
It inserts similarly worded provisos to Sections 3(3)(b) and
3A(3)(c), stating that if the gram panchayat fails to discharge its
duties in respect of housing
schemes or programmes funded by the government,
then a committee headed by the members
of the legislative assembly of the constituency shall select the
beneficiaries from the list prepared by the gram panchayat. In one
stroke, the legislator becomes the final arbiter over decisions of
the gram sabha. These provisos are dangerously open ended.
MLAs argued that gram sabhas were not competent to choose
beneficiaries for housing and other government-funded schemes in
Karnataka as gram panchayats were not holding gram sabhas and funds
were lapsing. They voted for an amendment that imposed
conditionality on this right and allowed for the constitution of
MLA-headed committees to perform this task. Who is to decide that a
gram panchayat has failed to discharge its duties? Who will
constitute the committee? Why specifically mention housing schemes?
What is the implication of providing scope for taking away the
powers of the gram sabha in respect of all schemes of the
government? The crudeness of the amendment takes one’s breath away.
Though the unseemly hurry with which the amendment was introduced
and passed shows a blatant lack of due processes, this was a long
time coming. Interestingly, a year back, the government tried to
bring
in the same amendments through an ordinance. However, saner counsel
prevailed after upright officers in the RDPR department fought tooth
and nail against it. The state’s secretary of parliamentary affairs
and legislation Bore Gowda also objected to this provision on the
grounds that taking away powers given to panchayats and gram sabhas
signified a reversal of panchayati raj and therefore required
presidential assent. He also voiced the view that taking away powers
specifically in respect of housing schemes would contravene Article
14 of the Constitution. On what grounds does the government justify
that for all other schemes the gram sabhas have the power, and
supposedly the intelligence, to select beneficiaries but when it
comes to the selection of people for housing, they are incapable and
therefore should not have the right?
This time around, there were no niceties of consultation. The
secretary of parliamentary affairs and legislation Gowda voiced the
same objections, but they were ignored. Currently, the top
bureaucrat at the state’s RDPR department is M R Sreenivasa Murthy
who paid no heed to Gowda’s opinion. The upright officers who
objected earlier are no longer around – they have been replaced by
those more compliant, who have with alacrity prepared the crude and
dubious draft amendment. No select committee was set up to
consider the serious implications of such a legislation and no
discussions were held with experts and concerned individuals. The
government did not invite public opinion. Worst of all, the gram
panchayats themselves were not consulted or even informed.
The gram sabhas are the deciding body in this regard; the only
platform we have that recognises the right of every citizen to
participate in decision-making, a major step towards realising self
governance and this amendment revokes this right. The amendment to
the Panchayat Raj Act virtually puts MLAs in the driver’s seat in
respect of the selection of any beneficiary for any scheme. The
message is loud and clear – people are now being held to ransom by
their MLAs who want to usurpvirtually all powers, including those
given to constitutionally mandated local bodies. This trend is not
confined to panchayats – now MLAs want more powers in urban local
bodies and university senates too.
The main trigger that set the MLAs on this course of action was
their loss of power and control over government-funded programmes.
There are innumerable government schemes, the central government
funded schemes by the Rajiv Gandhi Housing Corporation alone are
seven including the Ashraya, Ambedkar (rural and urban) and Indira
Awaz Yojana. In the year 2006-07 in Karnataka, the Ashraya scheme
alone distributed more than 3,54,000 houses at Rs 25,000 per home.
While the ST/SC community receives this as a full subsidy, other
below poverty line (BPL) families availed a 50 per cent subsidy and
a 50 per cent as a repayable loan. Of the 3,54,000 beneficiaries at
least 20- 30 per cent were bogus, many already possessing homes and
others concocting false proof of construction. The normal procedure
is that gram panchayats are notified about these programmes very
late and are given very short notice, rarely more than 10 days,
within which they have to call a gram sabha (giving one week’s
notice). The common scene at such gram sabhas is that thugs disrupt
the proceeding resulting in the termination of the gram sabhas and
of course by then there is no time to call another one. The
beneficiaries are not selected, the funds lapse and the MLAs crow
about the inefficiencies of the panchayats. In March 2007 an order
was passed that the choice of beneficiaries shall be done at gram
sabhas called for thepurpose and that the proceeding be compulsorily
videographed. This is posing problems for MLAs and so the amendment.
Seeking to Increase Control
We need to ask our legislators – is it their business to select
beneficiaries for programmes? Are they legislators or chief
executives of their constituencies? Is our vote a general power of
attorney? Can MLAs take away the powers of others that we have
elected to represent us in the panchayats? Can MLAs usurp the rights
of the gram sabhas? Do MLAs have knowledge and insights that are
superior to the members of a gram sabha regarding the needs and
situation of individuals in each gram sabha?
While we are witnessing the darkest hour of the panchayats, there is
also a silver lining. Not all MLAs or bureaucrats are panchayat-unfriendly.
At the two-day sammelan organised by the Institute of Social
Sciences in Bangalore a fortnight ago to celebrate 20 years of
panchayati raj in Karnataka, several MLAs who had risen from the
panchayats spoke of their commitment to decentralisation. When the
amendment was presented in the legislature, both in the assembly and
the council they were met with stiff resistance. MLAs such as
Sharanagowda Patil (Raichur), D R Patil (Gadag), H C Mahadevappa (Hunsur),
Araga Gnanendra (Thirthahalli) and several others forcefully
asserted that the government’s action was ill- dvised. In the
council the vote was tied, till the council chairperson tipped the
balance by his casting vote. Among the legislators who voted in
favour of the amendment were Srirama Reddy, J C Maadhuswamy,
Jayprakash Hedge, D H Shankar Murthy, and Basavaraj Horatti.
The deputy CM and minister for parlimentary affairs and legislation
abstained among several others making the passage of the amendment
so much easier for the ruling party.
Clearly, the primary responsibility for weakening panchayat raj must
rest with the chief minister. Apart from the platitudes that he
mouths on panchayat raj in meetings and seminars, Kumaraswami has
done precious little for panchayats during his tenure. He is a
member of the Empowered Sub-Committee of the National Development
Council on the Administrative and Financial Strengthening of
Panchayati Raj, but it is common knowledge that he has not attended
a single meeting so far, preferring to send his RDPR minister to
represent him. Most of the new initiatives of the government have
been distinctly anti- anchayat such as the Suvarna Gram Scheme,
meant for composite village development that virtually bypasses the
gram panchayats and invalidates their rightful role in planning and
implementation. Karnataka’s rural development minister, C M Udasi,
has the worst track record of any RDPR minister in recent times. His
anti-panchayat raj position is clear from the amendment he has
tabled and plainly reveals his real intentions, making a mockery of
a job that has been held by visionaries such as Abdul Nazeersaab and
M Y Ghorpade.
The unkindest cut of all was B K Chandrashekhar’s role in the
passing of this bill. close confidant of Ramakrishna
Hegde and Abdul Nazeersaab and a former member of the Rajiv Gandhi
Foundation’s task force on panchayati raj, Chandrashekhar has had a
long-standing reputation of being a panchayat raj supporter. After
allegedly pleading with the RDPR minister to withdraw the bill, when
a tie was reached he inexplicably cast his vote in favour of the
bill on the weak plea that he could not let the government down. In
one stroke, Chandrashekhar cast the final stone and will go down in
history as the one who delivered a mortal blow to panchayat raj in
Karnataka. His urbane voice can never ring true and his sincerity to
panchayati raj will always sound contrived after his recent conduct
in the council.
MLAs must be reminded that we have not given them open ended powers
to pass laws to keep every privilege for themselves. People elect
legislators primarily to enact law and not to control the delivery
of services that are, in accordance with the Constitution, to be
delivered by panchayats. Legislators cannot look at works undertaken
in their constituencies with a proprietorial air. It is public funds
that are being spent by panchayats – these funds are not the pocket
money of MLAs. The works undertaken or the services delivered cannot
be owned by any category of elected member. Legislators have already
enriched themselves by providing a local area fund for themselves –
now they wish to override all the decisions of panchayats and gram
sabhas on beneficiary selection. The larger implications of this
amendment should not be forgotten. It is time that people know
exactly where their elected representatives stand on the issue of
strengthening gram sabhas – and particularly to know who has let
them down at the time of reckoning.
What next? First, this is not the time for seminars and intellectual
discussions in confined halls. Our inaction and apathy at this stage
will only encourage more unconstitutional actions. If this amendment
should become part of the law, the government could at any time,
without any notice to us, revoke our participative rights and
decisions. Rather than moving towards he vision of our founding
fathers of gram swaraj and active and informed civil society
participation, we are regressing towards a dictatorship of
legislators over citizens and other levels of elected government.
This is not an issue that concerns the panchayat members alone –
undermining the ward sabhas and gram sabhas truncates the powers of
the people themselves. This action of the government calls for
widespread protest. In 32 years we seem to have come full circle. If
we truly believe in democracy, now is the time to defend it.