Source: http://www.dailypioneer.com/home/online-channel/top-story/96353-the-forgotten-gandhi.html
The
forgotten Gandhi
SATURDAY, 22 SEPTEMBER 2012
16:05
A SURYA PRAKASH
Son-in-law to one Prime
Minister, husband to another and father to a third, he should have been a
well-known face in the country’s political landscape. But this is not the case
with Feroze Gandhi whose birth centenary on September 12 has just gone unnoticed
September 12, 2012, the birth centenary of Feroze Gandhi
— India’s greatest investigative parliamentarian, crusader against corruption,
advocate of press freedom and the first campaigner for the people’s right to
information — has gone unnoticed. He was such a cerebral, diligent and ruthless
pursuer of truth that he was once described by a fellow MP as a “dangerously
well-informed person”. While the nation remains obsessed with the fortunes of
the family which has 10, Janpath as its postal address, it appears to have
forgotten the real Gandhi who bequeathed this magical surname to Sonia et al.
But why blame the nation when the fault lies with an
ungrateful Government controlled by this ungrateful family. Last year the
Government splurged Rs7.25 crore on newspaper advertisements on the occasion of
the birth anniversaries of Indira and Rajiv, but pretends not to notice
Feroze’s birth centenary. There may be other reasons for this display of
ungratefulness. Since the Government is engulfed in scams and is employing
undemocratic means to curtail parliamentary investigations, how can it hail the
man who was described as the greatest campaigner against
corruption?
Let us leave the Manmohan Singh Government to wallow in
its pettiness and pay our tribute to the man who demanded a strong ethical
framework for governance during the formative years of our democracy.
Feroze Gandhi began life as a freedom fighter when still
in his teens and went to jail on several occasions. He became a member of the
Provisional Parliament in 1950 and was elected to the Lok Sabha from Rae Bareli
in 1952 and 1957. He emerged as a formidable parliamentarian with his
maiden speech on the Insurance (Amendment) Bill in December 1955 in which he
exposed the cunning and wicked ways of the proprietors of several private
insurance companies. Having done some painstaking research, he held the Lok
Sabha in thrall as he narrated story after story about how business barons and
companies like the Dalmia-Jain Group played around with the funds of
insurers and the web of lies that these companies put out to fool insurers,
banks, shareholders and Government. At the end of his narration he demanded
strong measures to protect public funds invested in insurance companies,
meaning nationalisation of the insurance business.
Such was his impact that within two months the President
promulgated an Ordinance nationalising the insurance industry. Happy with the
outcome, Feroze Gandhi said: “To hold a horse you need a rein; to hold an
elephant you need a chain.”
The LIC-Mundhra
Scandal
In November 1957, Ram Subhag Singh and Feroze Gandhi got
wind of some shady deals between LIC and HD Mundhra, an industrialist. Singh
fired the opening shot via a question in which he asked: Whether LIC had
purchased large blocks of shares from different companies owned by Mundhra?
Deputy Minister of Finance: Towards the end of June 1957,
the corporation had invested Rs1,26,86,100 “in concerns in which Shri HD
Mundhra is said to have an interest”.
Ram Subhag Singh again asked whether nationalisation of
life insurance was not meant to stop such “spurious investments”.
Then Finance Minister TT Krishnamachari (TTK) rose to say
the investments were not spurious. LIC had invested in these companies “solely
with a view to getting a return and
making a safe investment...”
Feroze Gandhi: May I know whether it is a fact that a few
months ago shares were purchased at the higher price than the market price of
those very shares on that particular day...?
TTK: I have been told that no such thing has happened.
These words would soon come to haunt the Minister and
cost him his job. Through this brief exchange during Question Hour, Singh and
Gandhi had laid a neat trap into which the Minister had fallen. As the drama
unfolded over the next year in Parliament, people realised the extraordinary
power of Parliament and the potential power of an MP.
Dissatisfied with the Minister’s reply, Feroze initiated
a Half-Hour Discussion on the subject. He said: “A mutiny in my mind has
compelled me to raise this debate. When things of such magnitude, as I shall
describe to you later, occur, silence becomes a crime.” He unfolded the story
of murky deals between LIC and Mundhra companies as he attempted to “breach the
ramparts” of the Minister’s defence. The Minister had claimed that the
Government had no particular interest in Mundhra companies but Feroze showed
that over a six month period in 1957, on 19 occasions, LIC had bought shares of
the Mundhra Group for Rs1.56 crore. Did this not amount to favouring one
individual?
Feroze Gandhi then went on to show how LIC had allowed
itself to be cheated. He obtained damning evidence of fraud from the stock
exchanges. Shares of Mundhra companies had been artificially jacked up by 30-40
per cent in the week prior to the purchase of shares by LIC. For example, the
share of Osler Lamp Manufacturing Company, which was quoted at Rs2.81 from June
17 onwards, suddenly jumped to Rs4 on June 24, a day prior to the purchase by
LIC. Similarly, the shares of Angelo Brothers, which stagnated at Rs16.87 for a
week, jumped to Rs20.25. These purchases were made on June 25 but by the time
this debate took place in December, LIC’s Mundhra stocks had depreciated by
Rs37 lakh.
Bowing to pressure, the Government announced the
appointment of a commission of inquiry headed by Chief Justice MC Chagla of the
Bombay High Court. Feroze promptly offered himself as a witness and was the
first
to testify. Justice Chagla upheld Feroze’s contentions
and said that the Finance Minister should take constitutional responsibility
for what had happened. TTK tendered his resignation.
The most extraordinary aspect of Feroze Gandhi’s work was
the forensic precision with which he collected facts and the manner in which he
marshaled his arguments. While MPs do not exert themselves to obtain facts even
in this Internet age, Feroze Gandhi sent telegrams to the Calcutta Stock
Exchange and obtained the quotations for Mundhra companies between June 17 and
24, 1957. When he tabulated the information, the effect was dramatic. Referring
to the power of Parliament he said: “We cannot hang people, nor can we chop off
their necks. But we can turn their existence pretty difficult.” Later he said:
“I think collectively we have demonstrated the terrific striking power of
democracy. I think this inquiry has had a tonic effect on the entire country
and administration.” When it was all over, Home Minister GB Pant said that
there would be few parallels in political history to what had happened in this
case — where a member of the ruling party has exposed the Government. It was
all because of “the crusader” sitting in their midst.
Defender of Press Freedom
A staunch democrat, Feroze had an abiding commitment to a
free press and the people’s right to information. After he became an MP, he
realised that while the Constitution guaranteed freedom of speech to MPs and
insulated them from defamation suits, the press did not enjoy any such
protection. Therefore, newspapers were afraid to report the proceedings of
Parliament.
“The law of libel hangs like the sword of Damocles over
the head of every editor and correspondent,” Feroze said, adding that this fear
operated like a “silent censor” and prevented people from knowing that which
they have a right to know. The remedy lay in Parliament passing a law to protect
the press. Feroze examined the legal position in other democracies, consulted
fellow MPs and journalists and drafted the Proceedings of Legislature
(Protection of Publication) Bill. It was passed by the House in May 1956 and
gave the press much needed protection while reporting what transpired in
Parliament. In fact, but for this law, the media would have had great
difficulty in reporting the LIC-Mundhra Scandal as it unfolded in Parliament.
In an unusual gesture, the Government allowed a private member to draft and
move a Bill. It is a different story that his widow, Indira Gandhi, repealed
this law to gag the press during the infamous Emergency in 1975-77.
Subsequently, the law was restored.
A Forensic Mind
Feroze scrutinised lazy ministerial pronouncements with a
fine tooth comb and caught them when they spoke without applying their minds to
the issue at hand. For example, the Railway Minister had informed the House
that poor punctuality of trains was because the tracks got breached during the
monsoons. Feroze pulled out railways’ statistics and showed that in July when
there were 38 breaches of tracks, punctuality was 78 per cent but in December,
when there were no breaches, punctuality dropped to 75.7 per cent. So, the
reality was just the opposite of what the Minister had said!
Such was his commitment that often the Opposition looked
redundant. Time and again, Feroze would lead the charge and the Opposition
would follow in his footsteps. They would often begin their speeches by paying
him a tribute. He was like the Head Boy or Prefect in a school. The only job
assigned to the rest was to just fall in line. Over the last 50 years, there is
not a single MP in the Lok Sabha’s treasury benches who has made the Opposition
look superfluous like Feroze did.
The Forgotten Legacy
The Gandhi family (Sonia et al) has forgotten the Gandhi
who gave them their identity. If only they had remained loyal to the core
values that this brand originally promised — abiding commitment to democracy,
public good over personal gain, country above party and phenomenal grit to
pursue truth — one would not have seen the terrible erosion in brand equity.
The vote-pulling capacity of Brand Gandhi has slumped from around 45 per cent
in national elections during the Indira Gandhi era to around 25 per cent or
less at this juncture.
As Tarun Kumar Mukhopadhyaya, who has done a brilliant
parliamentary biography of Feroze Gandhi, has said: “He (Feroze) was completely
free from malice and successfully avoided all pettiness. Indeed, Feroze’s
tenure in Parliament, brief though it was, engendered and encouraged public
esteem for democratic institutions and faith in the integrity of public men.”
One can imagine how critical Feroze’s contribution was because in the 1950s
India was a fledgling democracy. But all these eulogies are nothing compared to
the tribute the greatest Gandhi paid to him when he was a young man. “If I
could get seven boys like Feroze to work for me, I (would) get swaraj in seven
days,” Mahatma Gandhi is said to have told Feroze’s mother Rattimai in
Allahabad in 1931, according to Katherine Frank, Indira Gandhi’s biographer.
Should we say more?
The writer, a
political commentator, is expert on parliamentary affairs
1 comment:
My God, I was told all vicious things about Feroze Gandhi! He was addicted to vices etc! Whatever that may be, he should be a perfect MP at least!
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