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Home > News > India News > Article > Wary govt vows not to engage civil society

Wary govt vows not to engage civil society

Updated on: 27 June,2011 07:03 AM IST  | 
Agencies |

Sibal attributes the decision to their 'not-so-pleasant experience' with Team Anna; adds Lokpal discussions cannot be cited as a precedent

Wary govt vows not to engage civil society

Sibal attributes the decision to their 'not-so-pleasant experience' with Team Anna; adds Lokpal discussions cannot be cited as a precedent

After a not-so-pleasant experience of engaging with Anna Hazare's team in drafting of the Lokpal Bill, the government says that there will be no such experiment in the future.



HRD minister Kapil Sibal, one of the key members of the joint committee for drafting the Lokpal Bill, also maintains that it cannot be cited as a precedent.

He says the draft of the Bill will undergo changes after consultations with political parties and other members of the civil society.

"I don't say it is a precedent. Given the situation the government was in, it is a decision that we took with open eyes and I don't consider it to be a precedent... the government was in a particular situation," Sibal said in an interview.

Asked if it was a "one-off" episode, he said, "I would imagine so."

Sibal emphasised that the draft Bill prepared by the five ministers was not the "final bill" and "it will go through changes when we get inputs not just from other political parties but also other members of civil society".

The government is holding a meeting with political parties on the issue on July 3.

Unfazed
Sibal refused to make any comment on Hazare's decision to go on a hunger strike again from August 16 but said "when that situation arises, I am sure the government will deal with it".

Noting that Hazare's associates Justice Santosh Hegde and Swami Agnivesh had publicly stated that the "fast is not the way", the minister said he was sure that the Gandhian "has the wisdom to decide what is best for him and the country".

He maintained that Hazare and his associates had wanted to create an authority outside the system which would be "accountable to nobody" and asserted that this could not be allowed to happen.

Asked why the committee could not firm up a common draft and had wound up work in bitterness, Sibal said, "On certain very significant issues, there was a huge divergence of perception and opinion, and the twain could not meet."

The committee failed to firm up a single draft of the Bill and it was decided that a note including views of both the government and Hazare's team would be put before the Cabinet for consideration.

Insisting that bringing Prime Minister under Lokpal was never the "central" issue of the committee's discussions, Sibal said, "I think the basic issue was how do you set up an authority outside the system not accountable to anybody.

How do you ensure that that authority, which is outside the system, will function in a chaste manner, uncorrupted, only because it is under the Lokpal."




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