Op-Ed: Who Needs A Lokayukta?

Ever since the Supreme Court sought a reply from 12 states, including Odisha, on why they have not yet appointed Lokayuktas, there has been outrage in the state over the non-appointment of one by the Naveen Patnaik government. Starting with a motivated campaign on social media (presumably launched by cyber warriors of the Opposition), the […]

Bikram-Arukh

Ever since the Supreme Court sought a reply from 12 states, including Odisha, on why they have not yet appointed Lokayuktas, there has been outrage in the state over the non-appointment of one by the Naveen Patnaik government. Starting with a motivated campaign on social media (presumably launched by cyber warriors of the Opposition), the outrage has spilled over into the state Assembly and even stalled the House for three consecutive days before it returned to business as usual on Thursday. But the outrage is actually misplaced. I will tell you why.

Let us not forget the context. The Lokayukta Bill was passed by the Assembly on February 14, 2014, less than two months after the Lokpal Act was passed by the Parliament even though the Act, as the Chief Minister helpfully emphasized while making the announcement at the time, provided for a ‘window’ of one year for the states to pass a similar legislation. This was the time when the euphoria generated by the India Against Corruption movement led by Anna Hazare was at its peak and the mood in the country, including in Odisha, was decisively against corruption. The time thus was ripe to cash in on the public mood against corruption and the BJD government did just that. How can it be blamed for doing what it did?