Anna Hazare ends fast, India celebrates
After single-handedly provoking a people's revolution, 72-year-old social activist Anna Hazare, who launched what he calls "India's second freedom struggle," ended his hunger strike.
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Barely a week after the nation celebrated the World Cup victory, a wave of euphoria swept India again on Saturday, April 9. This time it was not a cricket team but a 72-year-old man who is being hailed as the Mahatma Gandhi of the present.
Social activist Anna Hazare went on a "fast-unto-death" on April 5 demanding that the government introduce a bill to tackle corruption immediately, and that politicians alone not be in charge of drafting that bill.
It took Mr Hazare almost 98 hours of fasting to accomplish every point of an agenda that seemed preposterously ambitious when the week began. Till India pitched in, expressing its solidarity with rallies around Mr Hazare's cause.
As the government agreed to most of his demands, the entire nation reeled under the stupendous feeling of victory. -
Government's Lokpal Bill 2010 does not give the Lokpal (Ombudsman0 any power to either initiate action suo motu in any case or even receive complaints of corruption from general public. Only those complaints forwarded by Speaker of Lok Sabha/Chairperson of Rajya Sabha to Lokpal would be investigated by him. Activists call this bill toothless.
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The outpour of support for Anna Hazare's crusade against corruption forced the government to sit up and take notice. On the third day of Anna's hunger fast, the government reached out with an offer to set up an informal group, including activists and ministers. Shortly after the announcement, activists rejected the government's offer of an informal panel on the Lokpal Bill.
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The Jan Lokpal Bill (Citizen's ombudsman Bill) is a draft anti-corruption bill drawn up by prominent civil society activists seeking the appointment of a Jan Lokpal, an independent body that would investigate corruption cases, complete the investigation within a year and envisages trial in the case getting over in the next one year.
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Thousands are showing their solidarity in the fight against corruption, through the Internet. Social networking sites are flooded with updates and requests to join the fight against corruption. A group by the name "Join Anna Hazare in fast unto death to demand anti-corruption law" has seen more than 7,500 people joining in the past 48 hours.
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Facebook and Twitter have seen 45-50 updates per minute on Hazare. Users are updating their views and asking others to join the cause. Google Trend shows keywords like Anna Hazare and Lokpal Bill among the top 10 searches by netizens in India in the last two days.
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Many supporters of Anna Hazare and his fight against corruption are looking at this crusade in the context of the movement in Egypt. A Facebook update read: "It was Egypt and Libya...And now we will see same in India. Let this protest go on; we are with Anna Hazare."
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Four people in Bangalore's Freedom Park have also been fasting for the last two days to show solidarity for Mr Hazare's fight against corruption. During the past two days, nearly 200 people from all across the city visited Freedom Park to join these four on their indefinite hunger strike for the cause.
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Mr Hazare has questioned the government's wisdom in its choice of the Group of Ministers set up to fight corruption. After widespread public criticism, Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar quit the panel on Wenesday. "So what," said Mr Hazare, "if one Pawar goes...another will come."