NEW DELHI: After successfully leading the agitation on Lokpal Bill, social activist Anna Hazare has struck a note of caution.
  Expressing apprehension over parliamentarians' readiness to pass a  strong anti-corruption legislation he has asked his supporters to be  prepared for a "bigger battle".
 Addressing the media, the  73-year-old social activist said "power-hungry" politicians will not  easily accept any bill having stringent provisions against corruption or  "shed" the power they enjoy.
 "But on this issue, people will get  together," he said adding, MPs and MLAs were being elected to serve the  people and not to be their masters. "But they (elected representatives)  have forgotten this."
 Hazare, who has set August 15 as the deadline for passage of the  bill, said, "I feel there will be need for a bigger agitation in future  (to get the bill passed in Parliament)."
 "I don't think they (MPs) will easily accede to the passage of the bill as they feel it will cut down their powers."
  He said there is no fear among those who indulge in corruption. The  proposed Lok Pal will act a deterrent for the corrupt and put a "big  break" on the menace, Hazare felt.
 Agencies like the CBI, the CVC  and others are under government control and so they cannot fight  corruption effectively, he said adding, when the Lok Pal Bill comes into  effect, the authority will have autonomy and no one will be able to put  a spoke in its functioning.
 Replying to a question, he dismissed the possibility of misuse of the proposed law for political purposes.
  Admitting that he did not expect the groundswell of support for his  campaign witnessed in the last five days, he said people joined him in  such large numbers as they were fed up with corruption. "They have had  enough of it."
 Asked if he has come out as a "national hero" to  the youth like Mahatma Gandhi, Hazare said, "I am not worthy of even  sitting at Gandhiji's feet. But he has influenced my thought process."
 
 

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