Goa Elections : Looking beyond
--Leena Mehendale
When I received the letter from
Election Commission in May 2002 informing that I was to go as one of the
observers for the imminent Assembly elections in Goa, I did not expect my
experience there to be any different from my earlier experiences of elections,
either in Maharashtra, Bihar, Orissa or Rajasthan. Elections are elections, so
how will one be different from another! But I was mistaken in more than one
ways.
This being my first ever visit to
Goa, I kept telling myself that I should have an open mind about whatever I may
see there. From the very first visible contact even before the Jet flight
landed, Goa was an enchanting place, lush green and deep blue, a combination of
trees and the ocean. And the people were also different. Almost total literacy,
high levels of education, no begging, no child labour, highly empowered women,
no gender discrimination, no abject poverty, no economic stratification of
society, these were some instantly visible characteristics of the people.
Something must be said about the
property rights of women in Goa before every thing else. Under the Portuguese
rule of nearly 400 years, Goa had uniform civil code. This and other laws have
continued here even after liberation in 1961and Goans can be rightfully proud
of them. Under the property rights, the girl child gets equal share in parent’s
property just as her brother would get. After marriage, the properties of both
the bride and bridegroom are merged and they get equal right over all the
property. The official property registers are immediately modified so as to
show the rights of both. This offers complete security to women against being
driven out of her husband’s house. Dowry system is virtually absent, hence
dowry deaths or other dowry related crimes are practically nil. There is no
discrimination against the girl child, no cases of infanticide or foeticide.
Women could be seen in all types
of public activity, riding scooters, roaming freely, managing shops, and even
running a ‘bhelpuri thela’. The general crime rate in Goa is low and women do
not have to worry much about their physical safety. The only black spot in this
encouraging picture was the information that Goa has a worrisome rate of
tourism prostitution and the problems associated with it.
As I proceeded with my touring as
an election observer, the political profile started getting clearer and I could
not help making comparison with the conditions in other states. As far as
election related crimes or violence is concerned, Goa is to be rated as the
state with lowest number of crimes. There was no threat of booth capturing, no
voter intimidation, no ear –piercing loud- speakers. A meagre two or three
vehicles were captured for carrying sticks and soda water bottles whereas in
some other states one would have expected them carrying swords, chains, rifles
and even home-made bombs! And yet…….
Not muscle power but money power
was the key. Major cities and news papers were buzz with talks of allurement of
influencial voters with gifts and alcoholic drinks. Unlike in Assembly
constituencies elsewhere in the country, the number of voters in a Goa
constituency is only twenty thousand on an average. Voter turnout is around
sixty five per cent. Thus anyone who can manage about seven thousand votes is
in a comfortable, winning position. Stakes are high and not every voter needs
to be paid. So the going rates were quite high. Women were to be coaxed with
sarees. On the eve of polling, police held a couple of jeeps carrying sarees
worth a few lakhs. Although this does not prove any thing and the police
finally let the jeeps off, it shows the possibility.
This has baffled me a lot. We have
always deplored that we had a large proportion of illiterate and poverty-
struck voters, who were therefore amenable to the allurement of money and
gifts. This argument does not hold for Goa. Then why?
The justification provided was
that once elected, the candidates were going to make money through dubious
methods. So what was wrong in sharing the loot? Not everyone, but those who
accepted the gratification, had this argument. A friend implores me not to be
so critical of Goans; after all, well to do people with fancy cars and mobiles
have participated in looting vacant houses in Gujrat after Godhra incidence!
Personally I feel that this is a very dangerous mentality. I also feel that all
the programs such as karodpati and khelo India which encouraging people for
easy money are adding to this tendency of looting or sharing the loot.
Despite all this, majority of the
voters had their independent opinion, and were serious about maintaining
secrecy of vote. It was nice to see people queuing up even before eight in the
morning to finish their voting early and be free to go back to daily routine.
The campaigning revolved round
three issues, namely unemployment, good governance and defections. A large
number of youth, apparently unemployed, took part in campaigning. It is my
assessment that if the problem of unemployment is not solved, future elections
in Goa will also have more physical violence as in other parts of the country.
Election offered some temporary engagement to a lot of youth and one newspaper
even commented that there should be elections every year so that young people
get some employment.
Present level of corruption in Goa
does not affect people directly in their day- to- day life.
It occurs in cutting away forests,
urban permissions, disposal of comunidade land, mining permissions etc where
people have no immediate stakes.
I spoke to some candidates who
agreed that the election expenditure was much beyond the prescribed limit of
three lakhs. This was easily adjustable. Money that could be claimed as “spent
by party” or “by friends and relatives” was not to be shown as election expense.
It was not even to be reported.
I recall that when the Election
Commission first started the practice of appointing election observers and
became strict about the expenditure of the candidate, people raised many doubts
about political parties not showing these expenditures properly in their
accounts. I had replied with my great faith in administration that the Election
Commission would simultaneously appoint Central Observers who would look into
party accounts. But this did not happen. This lacuna gives a chance to
candidates to exceed the limit and claim that the party incurred the expenses.
Touring Goa, where other election
related crimes or irregularities are at minimal, I could not help thinking that
while as observers we were concentrating on such tiny issues as removing
posters near the polling booths, more important issues like financial influence
on voters, sale and purchase of members' loyalties, their defections and
infinitely higher opportunities of indulging in corruption were not being tackled.
There was gossipy story of a
candidate who wanted the ticket from a particular party. He was asked to pay a huge sum. He asked - "What for? With spending
half of that amount I can win the seat even by defeating your party
candidate!"
The story goes that he did not get
the ticket from that party. He nevertheless contested the election & won.
As the final outcome turned into a "hung assembly", he was offered a
price for his support. He retorted - what
gives you the power to offer me a price?
It is because of your ministerial chair. Well then, make me a minister -
of such & such important ministry, where I will take care of myself!"
We are all familiar with this and
similar types of stories. They disturb
us with their straightforward logic. Imagine a candidate officially allowed to
spend five lakhs for his election. Even his spending remains within the limit,
what will be his first priority after becoming a member or a minister? Obviously to get his money back, suitably
multiplied. And the only route for that
is corruption.
We do not seem to resent it
all. Even though this means that the
money is going from our pockets. Or, the money is being obtained from foreign
donors and sources which the country (that is, us) is repaying by compromising
our industrial well being, our freedom of action over crucial issues, our
intellectual property' rights and so on.
We do not resent this all.
The current election process in
India has given rise to two major problems.
One is corruption - coupled with muscle power, violence, intimidation
(except in some parts as in Goa). Perhaps even bigger evil is the culture of
divisions which is getting promoted by our election processes. For the purpose of wooing the voter and
winning, the candidates and parties are forced more and more to think in terms
of our religion, caste, province, language etc. Members of Assembly and
Parliament focus attention on small geographical area, which is their
constituency, and cannot put the country's problem above themselves and their
vote bank. National parties have a responsibility to think of the national
problems are busy trying to save their governments from defection. A time has
come to debate as to what are the alternatives to the present system --
alternatives, which will save us from corruption and divisive tendencies.
Bringing good and principled
people in politics is the answer. Yet, how to do that is the question. It is
necessary that our systems and processes support the honest people and smoothen
their tasks. Today our systems put all restrictions and bindings only the good
people and is largely ineffective against the wrong-doer. Some supportive steps
can be suggested. One, to reduce the number of parties, second, to publicize
the property returns of the candidates
for next ten years, third, to make the government more transparent. The time
has come for collective thinking on all these issues.