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But who will punish the bosses? | Crusade against corruption | | Early Times Report
Srinagar, July 3: The government has finally named sixty three employees, who according to the government were corrupt. Only an insane person can oppose a government's drive against corruption. Good governance has been repeatedly promised by successive governments but it still remains a distant dream in this neglected land. However, the incumbent government led by Mufti Muhammad Sayed seems serious in weeding out corruption from the administration. But questions arise. It has now been established in Jammu Kashmir that corruption percolates from top to the bottom. But the sharks always manage to escape the tentacles of the anti-graft bodies. So far patwaries and clerks have been held and put on trial. Never have the anti-graft bodies dared to touch the bosses. The functioning of the state accountability commission (SAC) was hampered by judicial intervention to save ministers involved in multi-crore scams. Who will punish the bosses? When will erring/corrupt ministers be brought to justice? In coalition politics, total prudence is not possible but in the name of sustaining the coalition, the poor state cannot be allowed to be vandalised by these parasites. Time and again it has been stated that the corrupt officials and politicians are under government radar. But it seems the radar has stopped showing the misdeeds of the unscrupulous elements. It needs political will to bring a corrupt minister to justice especially in a dispensation run by a coalition government.
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