In an exclusive interview, writer
Arundhati Roy said there are serious concerns about the Jan Lokpal Bill,
corporate funding, NGOs and even the role of the media.
Sagarika Ghose: Hello and welcome to the CNN-IBN
special. The Anna Hazare anti-corruption movement has thrown up multiple
voices. Many have been supportive of the movement, but there have been
some who have been sceptical and raised doubts about the movement as
well. One of these sceptical voices is writer Arundhati Roy who now
joins us. Thanks very much indeed for joining us. In your article in
'The Hindu' published on August 21, entitled 'I'd rather not be Anna',
you've raised many doubts about the Anna Hazare campaign. Now that the
movement is over and the crowds have come and we've seen the massive
size of those crowds, do you continue to be sceptical? And if so, why?
Arundhati Roy: Well, it's interesting that everybody seems
to have gone away happy and everybody is claiming a massive victory.
I'm kind of happy too, relieved I would say, mostly because I'm
extremely glad that the Jan Lokpal Bill didn't go through Parliament in
its current form. Yes, I continue to be sceptical for a whole number of
reasons. Primary among them is the legislation itself, which I think is a
pretty dangerous piece of work. So what you had was this very general
mobilisation about corruption, using people's anger, very real and valid
anger against the system to push through this very specific legislation
or to attempt to push through this very specific piece of legislation
which is very, very regressive according to me. But my scepticism ranges
through a whole host of issues which has to do with history, politics,
culture, symbolism, all of it made me extremely uncomfortable. I also
thought that it had the potential to turn from something inclusive of
what was being marketed and touted and being inclusive to something very
divisive and dangerous. So I'm quite happy that it's over for now.
Sagarika Ghose: Just to come back to your article. You
said that Arvind Kejriwal and Manish Sisodia have received $ 400,000
from the Ford foundation. That was one of the reasons that you were
sceptical about this movement. Why did you make it a point to put in the
fact that Arvind Kejriwal is funded by the Ford foundation.
Arundhati Roy: Just in order to point to the fact, a short
article can just indicate the fact that it is in some way an NGO driven
movement by Kiran Bedi, Arvind Kejriwal, Sisodia, all these people run
NGOs. Three of the core members are Magsaysay award winners which are
endowed by Ford foundation and Feller. I wanted to point to the fact
that what is it about these NGOs funded by World Bank and Bank of Ford,
why are they participating in sort of mediating what public policy
should be? I actually went to the World Bank site recently and found
that the World Bank runs 600 anti-corruption programmes just in places
like Africa. Why is the World Bank interested in anti-corruption? I
looked at five of the major points they made and I thought it was
remarkable if you let me read them out:
1) Increasing political accountability
2) Strengthening civil society participation
3) Creating a competitive private sector
4) Instituting restraints on power
5) Improving public sector management
So, it explained to me why in the World Bank, Ford foundation,
these people are all involved in increasing the penetration of
international capital and so it explains why at a time when we are also
worried about corruption, the major parts of what corruption meant in
terms of corporate corruption, in terms of how NGOs and corporations are
taking over the traditional functions of the government, but that whole
thing was left out, but this is copy book World Bank agenda. They may
not have meant it, but that's what's going on and it worries me a lot.
Certainly Anna Hazare was picked up and propped up a sort of saint of
the masses, but he wasn't driving the movement, he wasn't the brains
behind the movement. I think this is something very pertinent that we
really need to worry about.
Sagarika Ghose: So you don't see this as a genuine
people's movement. You see it as a movement led by rich NGOs, funded by
the World Bank to make India more welcoming of international capital?
Arundhati Roy: Well, I mean they are not funded by the
World Bank, the Ford foundation is a separate thing. But just that I
wouldn't have been this uncomfortable if I saw it as a movement that
took into account the anger from the 2G Scam, from the Bellary mining,
from CWG and then said 'Let's take a good look at who is corrupt, what
are the forces behind it', but no, this fits in to a certain kind of
template altogether and that worries me. It's not that I'm saying they
are corrupt or anything, but I just find it worrying. It's not the same
thing as the Narmada movement, it's the same thing as a people's
movement that's risen from the bottom. It's very much something that,
surely lots of people joined it, all of them were not BJP, all of them
were not middle-class, many of them came to a sort of reality show that
was orchestrated by even a very campaigning media, but what was this
bill about? This bill was very, very worrying to me.
Sagarika Ghose: We'll come to the bill in just a bit
but before that I want to bring in another controversial statement in
your article which has sparked a great deal of controversy among even
your old associates Medha Patkar and Prashant Bhushan, where you said,
'Both the Maoists and Jan Lokpal Movement have one thing in common, they
both seek the overthrow of the Indian state.' Why do you believe that
the movement for the Jan Lokpal Bill is similar to the Maoist movement
in seeking the overthrow of the Indian state?
Arundhati Roy: Well, let's separate the movement from the
bill, as I said that I don't even believe that most people knew exactly
what the provisions of the bill were, those who were part of the
movement, very few in the media and on the ground. But if you study that
bill carefully, you see the creation of a parallel oligarchy. You see
that the Jan Lokpal itself, the ten people, the bench plus the chairman,
they are selected by a pool of very elite people and they are elite
people, I mean if you look at one of the phases which says the search
committee, the committee which is going to shortlist the names of the
people who will be chosen for the Jan Lokpal will shortlist from eminent
individuals of such class of people whom they deem fit. So you create
this panel from this pool, and then you have a bureaucracy which has
policing powers, the power to tap your phones, the power to prosecute,
the power to transfer, the power to judge, the power to do things which
are really, and from the Prime Minister down to the bottom, it's really
like a parallel power, which has lost the accountability, whatever
little accountability a representative government might have, but I'm
not one of those who is critiquing it from the point of view of say
someone like Aruna Roy, who has a less draconian version of the bill,
I'm talking about it from a different point of view altogether of
firstly, the fact that we need to define what do we mean by corruption,
and then what does it mean to those who are disempowered and
disenfranchised to get two oligarchies instead of one raiding over them.
Sagarika Ghose: So do you believe that the leaders of
this movement were misleading the crowds who came for the protest
because they were not there simply as an anti-corruption movement, they
were there to campaign for the Jan Lokpal Bill and if people knew what
the Jan Lokpal Bill was all about, in your opinion, setting up this huge
bureaucratic monster, many of those people might well have not come for
the movement, so do you feel that the leaders were misleading the
people?
Arundhati Roy: I can't say that they were deliberately
misleading people because of course, that bill on the net, if anybody
wanted to read it could read it. So I can't say that. But I think that
the anger about corruption became so widespread and generalised that
nobody looked at what, there was a sort of dissonance between the
specific legislation and the anger that was bringing people there. So,
you have a situation in which you have this powerful oligarchy with the
powers of prosecution surveillance, policing. In the bill there's a
small section which says budget, and the budget is 0.25 per cent of the
Government of India's revenues, that works out to something like Rs 2000
crore. There's no break up, nobody is saying how many people will be
employed, how are they going to be chosen so that they are not corrupt,
you know, it's a sketch, it's a pretty terrifying sketch. It's not even a
realised piece of legislation. I think that, in a way the best thing
that could have happened has happened that you have the bill and you
have other versions of the bill and you have the time to now look at it
and see whatever, I just want to keep saying that I'm not, my position
in all this is not to say we need policing and better law. I'm a person
who's asking and has asked for many years for fundamental questions
about injustice, which is why I keep saying let's talk about what we
mean by corruption.
Sagarika Ghose: And you believe that the reason why this movement is misconceived is because it's centered around this Jan Lokpal Bill?
Arundhati Roy: Yes, not just that, I think centrally, that
I was saying earlier, can we discuss what we mean by corruption. Is it
just financial irregularity or is it the currency of social transaction
in a very unequal society? So if you can give me 2 minutes, I'll tell
you what I mean. For example, corruption, some people, poor people in
villages have to pay bribes to get their ration cards, to get their
NREGA dues from very powerful vested interests. Then you a middleclass,
you have honest businessmen who cannot run an honest business because of
all sorts of reasons, they are out there angry. You have a middleclass
which actually bribes to buy itself scarce favours and on the top you
have the corporations, the politicians looting millions and mines and so
on. But you also have a huge number of people who are outside the legal
framework because they don't have pattas, they live in slums, they
don't have legal housing, they are selling their wares on redis, so they
are illegal and in an anti-corruption law, an anti-corruption law is
naturally sort of pinned to an accepted legality. So you can talk about
the rule of law when all your laws are designed to perpetuate the
inequality that exists in Indian society. If you're not going to
question that, I'm really not someone who is that interested in the
debate then.
Sagarika Ghose: So fundamentally it's about service
delivery to the poorest of the poor, it's about ensuring justice to the
poorest of the poor, without that a whole bureaucratic infrastructure is
meaningless?
Arundhati Roy: Well Yes, but you know as I said in my
article, supposing you're selling your samosas on a 'rehdi' (cart) in a
city where only malls are legal, then you pay the local policemen, are
you going to have to now pay to the Lokpal too? You know corruption is a
very complicated issue.
Sagarika Ghose: But what about the provisions for the
lower bureaucracy. The lower bureaucracy is going to be brought into the
Lokpal, they're going to have a state level Lokayukta, so there is an
attempt within the Lokpal Bill to go right down to the level of the
poorest of the poor and then you can police even those functionaries who
deal with the very poor. So don't you have hope that there, at least,
it could be regularised because of this bill?
Arundhati Roy: I think that part of the bill will be
interesting, I think it's very complicated because the troubles that are
besetting our country today are not going to be solved by policing and
by complaint booths alone. But, at the lower level, I think we have to
come up with something where you can assure people that you're not going
to set up another bureaucracy which is going to be equally corrupt.
When you have one brother in BJP, one brother in Congress, one brother
in police, one brother in Lokpal, I would like to see how that's going
to be managed, this law is very sketchy about that.
Sagarika Ghose: But just to come back to the movement
again, don't you think that the political class has become corrupt and
has become venal and you have a movement like this it does function as a
wake up call?
Arundhati Roy: To some extent yes, but I think by focusing
on the political class and leaving out the corporations, the media that
they own, the NGOs that are taking over, governmental functions like
health, you know corporates are now dealing with what government used to
deal with. Why are they left out? So I think a much more comprehensive
view would have made me comfortable even though I keep saying that for
me the real issue is what is it that has created a society in which 830
million people live on less than Rs 20 a day and you have more people
and all of the poor countries of Africa put together.
Sagarika Ghose: So basically what you're saying is that
laws are not the way to tackle corruption and to tackle injustice. It's
not through laws, it's not through legal means, we have to do it
through much more decentralisation of power, much more outreach at the
lowest level?
Arundhati Roy: I think first you have to question the
structure. You see if there is a structural inequality happening, and
you are not questioning that, and you're in fact fighting for laws that
make that structural inequality more official, we have a problem. To
give an example, I was just on the Chhattisgarh-Andhra Pradesh border
where the refugees from Operation Greenhunt have come out and
underneath. So for them the issue is not whether Tata gave a bribe on
his mining or Vedanta didn't give a bribe in his mining. The problem is
that there is a huge problem in terms of how the mineral and water and
forest wealth of India is being privatised, is being looted, even if it
were non corrupt, there is a problem. So that's why we're just not
coolly talking about Dantewada, there are many a places I mean what's
happening in Posco, in Kalinganagar . So this is not battles against
corruption. There's something very, very serious going on. None of these
issues were raised or even alluded to somehow.
Sagarika Ghose: So basically what you're saying is that
it is not the battle against corruption which is the primary battle,
it's the battle for justice that has to be the primary battle in India.
Just to come back to the point about the law, many have said that this
is a process of pre-legislative consultation, that all over the world
now civil society groups, I know you don't like that word, are
co-operating with the government in law making and a movement like this
institutionalises that, institutionalises civil society groups coming
into the law making process. Doesn't that make you hopeful about this
movement?
Arundhati Roy: In principal, yes, but when a movement like
this which has been constructed in the way that it has, you can talk
about, sort of calls itself the people or civil society and says that
it's representing all of civil society. I would say there's a problem
there and it depends on the law. So right now I think the good thing
that has happened is that the Jan Lokpal Bill which probably has some
provisions that will make it into the final law, is one of the many
bills that will be debated. So, yes, that's a good thing. But if it had
just gone through in this way, I wouldn't be saying yes, that's a good
thing.
Sagarika Ghose: Let's talk about the media. You've been
very critical about the media and the way the media, particularly
broadcast media has covered this movement, do you believe that if the
media had not given it this kind of time, this movement simply wouldn't
have taken off? Do you believe that it's a media manufactured movement?
Arundhati Roy: Well, I'm not going to say that's entirely
media manufactured. I think that was one of the big factors in it. There
was also mobilisation from the BJP and the RSS, which they've admitted
to. I think the media, I don't know when before campaigned for something
in this way where every other kind of news was pushed out and for ten
days, you had only this news. In this nation of one billion people, the
media didn't find anything else to report and it campaigned, not
everybody, but certainly certain major television channels campaigned
and said they were campaigning, they said, 'We're the channel through
whom Anna speaks to the people and so on. Now firstly to me that's a
form of corruption in the first place where presumably, a broadcast
licence as a news channel has to do with reporting news, not
campaigning. But even if you are campaigning and the only reason that
everybody was reporting it was TRP ratings, then why not just settle for
pornography or sadomasochism or whatever gives good TRP ratings. How
can news channels just abandon every other piece of news and just
concentrate on this for 10 days? You know how much of spot ad costs on
TV, what kind of a price would you put on this? Why was it doing this?
Per se if media campaigns had to do with social justice, if the media
spent 10 days campaigning on why more than a lakh farmers have committed
suicide in this country, I'd be glad because I would say okay, this is
the job of the media. It is like the old saying - to afflict the
comfortable and comfort the afflicted.
Sagarika Ghose: But don't you think one man taking on
the might of the government is a big story and don't you think that that
deserves to be covered?
Arundhati Roy: No, I don't. For all the sorts of reasons
that I've said, it was one man trying to push through a regressive piece
of legislation.
Sagarika Ghose: Let's come to the role of the RSS which
you have also eluded to. You've spoken about the role of aggressive
nationalism or Vande Mataram being chanted, of the RSS saying that we're
involved in this particular movement, but then your old associates
Prashant Bhushan and Medha Patkar are in this movement as well. Is it
fair to completely dub this movement as an RSS Hindu right wing
movement?
Arundhati Roy: I haven't done that though some people
have. But I think it's an interesting question to talk about symbolism
and this movement. For example, what is the history of Vande Mataram?
Vande Mataram first occurred in this book by Bankim Chandra Chatterjee
in 1882, it became a part of a sort of war cry at the time of partition
of Bengal and since then, since in 1937 Tagore said it's a very
unsuitable national anthem, very divisive, it's got a long communal
history. So what does it mean when huge crowds are chanting that? When
you take up the national flag, when you're fighting colonialism, it
means one thing. When you're a supposedly free nation that national flag
is always about exclusion and not inclusion. You took up that flag and
the state was paralysed. A state which is not scared of slaughtering
people in the dark, suddenly was paralysed. You talk about the fact that
it was a non violent movement, yes, because the police were disarmed.
They just were too scared to do anything. You had Bharat Mata's photo
first and then it was replaced by Gandhi. You had people who were openly
part of the Manovadi Krantikari Aandolan there. So you have this
cocktail of very dangerous things going on, you had other kinds of
symbolism. Imagine Gandhi going to a private hospital after his fast. A
private hospital that symbolises the withdrawal of the state from
healthcare for the poor. A private hospital where the doctors charge a
lakh every time they inhale and exhale. The symbolisms were dangerous
and if this movement had not ended in this way, it could have turned
extremely dangerous. What you had was a lot of people, I'm not going to
say they were only RSS, I'm not going to say they were only
middle-class, I'm not going to say they were only urban. But yes, they
were largely more well off than most people who have been struggling on
the streets and facing bullets in this country for a long time. But in
some odd way the victims and the perpetrators of corruption of the
recipients of the fruits of modern development, they were all there
together. There were contradictions that could not have been held
together for much longer without them just tearing apart.
Sagarika Ghose: But weren't you impressed by the sheer
size of the crowd? Weren't you impressed by the spontaneity of the
crowd? The fact that people came out, they voiced their anger, they
voiced their protest, surely it can't just all be boxed into one shade
of opinion.
Arundhati Roy: Should I tell you something Sagarika? I
have seen much larger crowds in Kashmir. I have seen much larger crowds
even in Delhi. Nobody reported them. They were then only called 'traffic
jam bana diya inhone'. I was not impressed by the size of the crowds
apart from the fact that I'm not that kind of a person. I'm sure there
were larger crowds chanting for the demolition of the Babri Masjid,
would that be fine by us? It's not about numbers.
Sagarika Ghose: Is that how you see this movement? You see it as a kind of Ram Janmabhoomi Part 2?
Arundhati Roy: No, not at all. I've said what I feel. That
would be stupid for me to say. But I see it as something potentially
quite worrying, quite dangerous. So I think we all need to go back and
think a lot about what was going on there and not come to easy
conclusions and easy condemnations, I think we really need to think
about what was going on there, how it was caused, how it happened, what
are the good things, what are the bad things, some serious thinking. But
certainly I'm not the kind of person who just goes and gets impressed
by a crowd regardless of what it's saying, regardless of what it's
chanting, regardless of what it's asking for.
Sagarika Ghose: But what about the persona of Anna
Hazare? Many would say that he evoked a certain different era, he evoked
the era of the freedom struggle, he is a simple Gandhian, he does lead a
very austere life, he lives in a small room behind a temple and his
persona of what he is evokes a certain moral power perhaps which is
needed in an India which is facing a moral crisis.
Arundhati Roy: I think Anna Hazare was a sort of empty
vessel in which you could pour whatever meaning you wanted to pour in,
unlike someone like Gandhi who was very much his own man on the stage of
the world. Anna Hazare certainly is his own man in his village, but
here he was not in charge of what was going on. That was very evident.
As for who he is and what his affiliations and antecedents have been,
again I'm worried.
Sagarika Ghose: Why are you worried?
Arundhati Roy: Some of things that one has read and found
out about, his attitude towards Harijans, that every village must have
one 'chamaar' and one 'sunaar' and one 'kumhaar', that's gandhian in
some ways, you know Gandhi had this very complicated and very
problematic attitude to the caste system, anyone who knows about the
debates between Gandhi and Ambedkar will tell you that. But what I'm
saying is eventually we live in a very complicated society. You have a
strong left edition which doesn't know what to do with the caste system.
You have the Gandhians who are also very odd about the caste system.
You have our deeply frightening communal politics, you have this whole
new era of new liberalism and the penetration of international capital.
This movement just did not know the beginning of its morals. It could
have ended badly because nobody really, you know, you choose something
like corruption, it's a pot into which everyone can piss, anti-left,
pro-left, right, I mean, I was in Hyderabad, Jagan Mohan Reddy who was
at that time being raided by the CBI was one of his great supporters.
Naveen Patnaik…
Sagarika Ghose: But isn't that its strength? It's an inclusive agenda. Anti-corruption movement brings people in.
Arundhati Roy: It's a meaningless thing when you have
highly corrupt corporations funding an anti-corruption movement, what
does this mean? And trying to set up an oligarchy which actually neatens
the messy business of democracy and representative democracy however
bad it is. Certainly it's a comment on the fact that our country
suffering from a failure of representative democracy, people don't
believe that their politicians really represent them anymore, there
isn't a single democratic institution that is accessible to ordinary
people. So what you have is a solution which isn't going to address the
problem.
Sagarika Ghose: So a corporate funded movement which
seeks to lessen the power of the democratic state and seeks to reduce
the power of the democratic state?
Arundhati Roy: I would say that this bill would increase
the possibilities of the penetration of international capital which has
led to a huge crisis in the first place in this country.
Sagarika Ghose: Just on a different note, what do you
think of the fast-unto-death? Many have criticised it as a 'Brahamastra'
which shouldn't be easily deployed in political agitations, Gandhi used
it only as a last resort. What is your view of the hunger strike or the
fast-unto-death?
Arundhati Roy: Look the whole world is full of people who
are killing themselves, who are threatening to kill themselves in
different ways. From a suicide bomber to the people who are immolating
themselves on Telangana and all that. Frankly, I'm not one of those
people who's going to stand and give a lecture about the
constitutionality of resistance because I'm not that person. For me it's
about what are you doing it for. That's my real question - what are you
doing it for? Who are you doing it for? And why are you doing it? Other
than that I think I personally believe that there are things going on
in this world that you really need to stand up and resist in whatever
way you can. But I'm not interested in a fast-unto-death for the Jan
Lokpal Bill frankly.
Sagarika Ghose: So what is your solution then. How would you fight corruption?
Arundhati Roy: Sagarika, I'm telling you that corruption
is not my big issue right now. I'm not a reformist person who will tell
you how to cleanse the Indian state. I'm going on and on in all the 10
years that I've written about nuclear powers, about nuclear bombs, about
big dams, about this particular model of development, about
displacement, about land acquisition, about mining, about privatisation,
these are the things I want to talk about. I'm not the doctor to tell
the Indian state how to improve itself.
Sagarika Ghose: So corruption really does not concern you in that sense?
Arundhati Roy: No, it does, but not in this narrow way.
I'm concerned about the absolutely disgusting inequality in the society
that we live in.
Sagarika Ghose: And this movement has done nothing to
touch that. What precedents has it set for protest movements in the
future? Do you think this movement has set a precedent for protest
movements in the future?
Arundhati Roy: For protest movements of the powerful,
protests movements where the media is on your side, protests movements
where the government is scared of you, protest movements where the
police disarm themselves, how many movements are there going to be like
that? I don't know. While you're talking about this, the army is getting
ready to move into Central India to fight the poorest people in this
country, and I can tell you they are not disarmed. So, I don't know what
lessons you can draw from a protest movement that has privileges that
no other protest movement I've ever known has had.
Sagarika Ghose: Just to re-emphasise the point about
Medha Patkar and Prashant Bhushan, these are old time associates of
yours in activism. They are deeply involved in this particular movement.
How do you react to them being involved in this movement of which,
you're so critical?
Arundhati Roy: With some dismay because Prashant is a very
close friend of mine and I respect Medha a lot, but I think that their
credibility has been cashed in on in some ways, but I feel bad that they
are part of it.
Sagarika Ghose: You have voiced fears in your article
as well that in some ways, this movement and this bill is an attempt to
diminish the powers of the democratic government and to reduce the
discretionary powers of the democratic government. So you feel that this
is a corporate funded exercise to reduce the powers of the
democratically elected government?
Arundhati Roy: Well not corporate funded, but there's a
sort of IMF World Bank way of looking at it, fuelling this whole path
because if you remember in the early 90s when they began on this path of
liberalisation and privatisation. The government itself kept saying,
'Oh, we're so corrupt. We need a systemic change, we can't not be
corrupt,' and that systemic change was privatisation. When privatisation
has shown itself to be more corrupt than, I mean the levels of
corruption have jumped so high, the solution is not systemic. It's
either moral or it's more privatisation, more reforms. People are
calling for the second round of reforms for the removal of the
discretionary powers of the government. So I think that's a very
interesting that you're not looking at it structurally, you're looking
at it morally and you're trying to push whatever few controls there are
or took the way once again for the penetration of international capital.
Sagarika Ghose: But people like Nandan Nilekani have
argued this movement and this bill could stop reforms actually. It could
actually put an end to the reforms process by instituting this big
bureaucratic infrastructure - this inspector raj. But you don't go along
with that. You believe that this is a way of taking the reforms agenda
forward.
Arundhati Roy: I think it depends on who captures that
bureaucracy. That's why I'm worried about this combination of sort of
Ford funded NGO world and the RSS and that sort of world coming together
in a kind of crossroads. Those two things are very frightening because
you create a bureaucracy which can then be controlled, which has Rs 2000
crore or whatever, 0.25 per cent of the revenues of the Government of
India at its disposal, policing powers, all of this. So it's a way of
side-stepping the messy business of democracy.
Sagarika Ghose: That's interesting the combination of
Ford funded NGOs, rich NGOs and the Hindu mass organisations. That's the
combination that you see here and that's what makes you uneasy.
Arundhati Roy: yes, and when you look at the World Bank
agenda, it's 600 anti-corruption plans and projects and what it says,
what it believes, then it just becomes as clear as day what's going on
here.
Sagarika Ghose: And what is going on, just to push you on that one?
Arundhati Roy: What I said, that you stop concentrating on
the corruption of government officers when you know of governments,
politicians, and leaving out the huge corporate world, the media, the
NGOs who have taken over traditional government functions of
electricity, water, mining, health, all of that. Why concentrate on this
and not on that? I think that's a very, very big problem.
Sagarika Ghose: So it was a protest movement of the
entitled and the protest movement of the privileged. Arundhati Roy
thanks very much indeed for joining us.
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