Prime Minister Manmohan Singh presented his government's report card on Wednesday on completion of four years of staying in power. Adding his previous regime, the UPA government is in power for nine years. One thing is clear that no prime minister can be honest enough to do genuine critical analysis of his own government. Those were different days when former prime minister Jawahar Lal Nehru came down heavily on his own ministers following allegations of nepotism and corruption. Now, it's all about cover-up business and making bold (at times foolishly bold) claims of one's own achievements. Manmohan Singh seemed one such exposed politician on Wednesday.
The Prime Minister chose to focus on four areas, that were key to him in patting his back. His "four key achievements: one, the improved performance of the economy; two, making the growth process more inclusive; three, delivery of better governance and better delivery of welfare and development programmes; and, four, improved relations with a changing and challenging world" are now public. Singh insisted that his government has "taken our country forward on all these four fronts in the nine years".
Manmohan Singh could have done well
speaking the truth behind stagnating economy. He should have explained
why his government is suffering from policy paralysis, why several
infrastructural projects have been stalled, why investment projects are
not taking off, why corruption has become a rule in his government and
most importantly, why governance has been receding for four-five years.
The government's claim of making growth more inclusive is
debatable. Many communities in India are sulking under the present
regime. Tribals in the east and the north-east feel deeply alienated. It
finds expression in the spreading network of naxal insurgency. The
naxalism has successfully found foot soldiers in Assam for the first
time since it started in late 1960s in West Bengal. The only state where
naxal violence has been curbed is Andhra Pradesh but the state is
embroiled in nothing less than what could be termed as a 'mini
civil-war' with Telangana simmering to have its separate identity and
Royalseema hoping to gain some lateral benefits. There is none to deny
that Telangana has been mismanaged by the Manmohan Singh government.
Singh's third claim of better governance and ensuring
welfare of people can be easily reviewed in the chorus of 2G, Coal,
Defence, MNREGS and many other scams. Most of the scams were examined
and verified by the Comptroller and Auditor General's office, which came
under sharp criticism from the government. Thankfully, the judicial
decisions have not gone against the claims of the CAG. Now, the same
constitutional body's independence is reportedly being compromised with
the UPA's decision to appoint defence secretary Shashi Kant Sharma as
the next CAG of India. Sharma will be examining and auditing the deals
that he cleared as the defence secretary as part of the UPA government's
machinery. Combine this with reports suggesting government's neglect of
intelligence gathering resulting in terror attacks climaxed in
2008-killings in Mumbai, and one will get a scary picture of governance
and compromising condition of the welfare of people.
The welfare schemes of the government, chiefly under the
right to education, the right to employment and proposed schemes under
right to food and the right to health are all fraught with serious
economic danger. The right to eduction has not helped improvement in
quality education. The need of the hour is not simply bringing kids to
school but to empower them with quality and competitive education. Only
then will the teeming millions can take on the dominating world
economies. The drop out rates and declining quality of education must be
wrest immediately. For this to achieve the prime minister and his
ministers should have worked in close coordination with the state
governments but the politics prevailed over good 'welfare' sense.
Right to employment through MNREGS has only encouraged
corruption and eaten up tax payers' money. Food security and health
bills will aggravate the situation only. These two politically ambitious
schemes will in all probability fall flat as there is an absolute lack
of adequate administrative machinery to deliver the goods. The end
result will be fleecing the tax payers, which include even those who may
be the targetted beneficiary.
Finally, the Prime Minister feels that India's relation
with the comity of nations has improved. This holds true only if one
excludes everything except business. The neighbours constantly keep
teasing India. China has made at least four serious incursions into
Indian territories during UPA's rule, the latest being in Despang area,
wherein Chinese forced India to compromise on border security vigil.
Pakistan has not shown any intent of assuaging India's concerns.
Bangladesh does not shy away from challenging India.
Nepal keeps pricking it and uses China threat to counter its southern neighbour. Sri Lanka has openly contested India's rights in the sea waters. India too has failed to grab the opportunities to cement ties with the island nation in recent past paving way for greater cooperation between Sri Lanka and China. India remained practically a mute spectator while Maldives plunged into a chaos. India has faced many diplomatic embarrassments at the hands of Italy, Argentina, Iran and a host of other nations in past nine years, a period which the Prime Minister chose to reflect upon. The only bright diplomatic spot that is visible on the UPA's face if nuclear deal with the US and subsequent approval by the nuclear suppliers group. But, the deal is still controversial and can be judged only in longer term.
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