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The still smoking gun
HOW THE BOFORS AFFAIR TRANSFORMED INDIA - 1989-1999: Lt. Gen.
(Retd.) M. Mayadas; Lancer Publishers & Distributors, 56, Gautam
Nagar, New Delhi-110049. Rs. 395.
LIKE THE ghost in Hamlet, the ``smoke'' from the Bofors issue
just refuses to go away. At a time when the final set of
documents has reached the CBI and the case enters a decisive
stage, Lt. Gen. Mayadas (Retd.), who headed the Technical
Evaluation Committee (TEC) to assess the various guns on offer,
has come out with this book to throw more light on the
controversy.
Without any reservation and with the full backing of his
committee report and enquiries, the retired Lt. General has bared
all in this book. Unfortunately, he has chosen to ramble far
outside the purview of the ``smoking gun'' and discusses the
whole canvas of corruption in the Indian polity.
It is doubtful if the Bofors gun deal was the first major issue
of corruption in India. Nor is it the last. The present Defence
Minister, Mr. George Fernandes, has ordered a full-fledged
investigation by the Chief Vigilance Commissioner into all the
defence deals since 1985, to identify any irregularities or
malpractices. The probe will go into the latest purchase of arms
and ammunition for the Kargil war and also lay down norms and
procedures for future defence deals.
The author gloats over the fact that the Bofors gun deal became
the central issue in the 1989 election and Rajiv Gandhi and his
Congress Party lost power because of the needle of suspicion.
But, the retired General makes it clear, time and again, that it
was the former Army Chief, Gen. Sundarji, who pushed for Bofors
and made it suddenly the first in a list of four field guns that
were under consideration.
Despite the fact that his TEC brought Bofors back to the third
place, giving the Austrian and the French guns the top two slots,
the author was shell-shocked to know when the Government finally
decided on Bofors. In an appendix, he details the grounds on
which his committee made the selection.
What is puzzling and raises serious doubts about where the orders
came from, he traces the history of the purchase of the field
guns. Starting from the mid-1970s, the Indian Army was looking
for a suitable gun. But suddenly, when the author took over as
the Director-General of Weapons and Equipment in 1985, there was
a rush to decide on the issue. He could not understand the haste.
Even now, the problem of mobility for the Bofors gun has not been
solved because the Swiss did not fit it with a self-propelled
vehicle. The author has also briefly dealt with the mockery of
the Joint Parliamentary Committee set up to go into the Bofors
issue, which rocked the Parliament following the disclosures in
the media.
If only the author had stuck to just the Bofors issue and
provided a more comprehensive appendix along with the published
documents relating to the deal, this book could have emerged as a
ready reference on the scandal. But he enjoys looking at the
political canvas and expressing his anguish at the corruption all
round - the corruption of the entire system. He is particularly
appalled at the state of the administration in Bihar. He has also
referred to the nexus between various lobbies, which have
entrenched corruption in high places and down the hierarchy. Can
anything in the Government - from the village to the national
capital - be done without greasing somebody's palm?Looking at it
more dispassionately, it is not just the system, but the people
who are responsible for this sorry state of affairs. It is not
only the corrupt who must be blamed and punished, but also those
who thrive by corrupting those in need and those in power.
Corruption has become a shortcut to reach the destination, a way
of life not just in India, but all over the world.
V. JAYANTH
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