Meet 11 people's representatives who are in question

Written By Josy Joseph | Updated:

Often, questions raise curiosity over the intention. But none of these issues seem to have bothered Parliamentarians. The expose was waiting to happen.

NEW DELHI: The most common reply to questions put up in Parliament is "No Sir" and "Does Not Arise." And the second most popular would be "Yes Sir." Not all questions put up by Members of Parliament get answered. Those answered go through a rigmarole of officialdom, through layers of bureaucracy, checking, final approval etc at senior levels, and often to ministers concerned, before it reaches Parliament. It is supposed to be a sacrosanct reply, telling only the truth, given to country's highest democratic body.
 
But answers are often very a sophisticated play of words. Answers often hide much more than what they reveal. They often skip the issue without lying. The "Yes Sir" and "No Sir" answers are the end result of a detailed exercise.
 
The bureaucratic word play in answers is not the only problem. Quite often, questions raise curiosity over the intent behind the question. But none of these issues seem to have bothered the Parliamentarians till now. And the expose was waiting to happen.
 
There is something wrong with the very system of parliamentary questions and answers. Not that politicians are not aware of the problem. It is part of central hall chitchat, newsroom gossip but never officially spelt out. Today's expose in a way was a response to a system that was failing to reinvent with time.
 
In this session, a Member of Parliament asked if after the Navy's aircraft carrier INS Vikrant was converted into a museum in Mumbai, whether it is left with only one carrier in service called Samrat. The question went through bureaucratic formalities and was part of the answers. The reality is that India does not have a carrier called Samrat, and it is but common knowledge that the Navy's only carrier is Viraat. During a session few months back, another member, a former film star, asked detailed questions about the Prime Minister's trip to Paris, details of defence contract negotiated etc. The fact was that the PM was yet to visit France when the question was raised.
 
A closer look at these 11 people’s representatives
 
Cobrapost.com approached the following MPs posing to be representatives of a fictitious organisation called North Indian Small Manufacturer's Association (NISMA). The operation, spread over eight months, could get more than 60 questions submitted out of which 25 were selected to be tabled in the parliament. Some MPs even quoted a sum of 5-6 lakhs per year as a sort of retainer in exchange for which, NISMA could ask as many questions as they wanted.
 
Manoj Kumar
(RJD, Palamau, Jharkhand) Rs 110,000
An agriculturist by profession, he holds a BA degree. A two-term member of the Jharkhand assembly. Was first elected MP in 2004
 
Narendra Kumar Kushwaha
(BSP, Mirzapur, UP) Rs 55,000
A social worker by occupation, he has a BA degree. A first time member of the Lok Sabha, he was elected in 2004
 
YG Mahajan
(BJP, Jalgaon Maharsahtra) Rs 35,000
An agriculturist by profession, he holds a BEd degree. He first made a mark in politics in 1992. Elected MP in 1999 and in 2004
 
Suresh Chandel 
(BJP, Hamirpur, HP) Rs 30,000
An agriculturist, holds a masters degree. For long involved in BJP politics at the state level. First elected as MP in 1998, then in 1999 and 2004.
 
Chhatrapal Singh Lodha, Rajya Sabha 
(BJP, Orissa) Rs 15,000
He was nominated to the Rajya Sabha in 2004. He lost the 1999 Lok Sabha election.
 
Anna Saheb M.K. Patil
(BJP, Erandol, Maharastra) Rs 45,000
A four-term Lok Sabha MP. Holds a chemical engineering degree from Pune University. He also studied at the Louisiana State University
 
Lal Chandra Kol  
(BSP, Robertsganj, UP) Rs 35,000
An agriculturist, he studied up to the Class XII. A first timer, he entered parliament in 2004
 
Pradeep Gandhi
(BJP, Rajnandgaon, Chhattisgarh) Rs 55,000
A businessman by profession, he is a graduate. He was elected to both the Chhattisgarh assembly and the Lok Sabha in 2004 but opted for the latter
 
Raja Ram Pal
(BSP, Bilhaur, Uttar Pradesh) Rs 35,000
An advocate, he served as a legislator in Uttar Pradesh 1996-2002 and was first elected to the Lok Sabha in 2004
 
Chandra Pratap Singh
(BJP, Sidhi, Uttar Pradesh) Rs 35,000
An agriculturist by occupation, he studied up to the higher secondary level. He began his political career in 1978 as a sarpanch. First elected to Lok Sabha in 1999 and was re-elected in 2004.
 
Ramsevak Singh
(Congress, Gwalior Madhya Pradesh) Rs 50,000
An agriculturist by profession, he has studied up to class IX. He was first elected to the Lok Sabha in 2004.
 
 
 
Yet all of them may not be guilty in the eyes of  law
 
Rakesh Bhatnagar
 
NEW DELHI: Lawmakers who had succeeded in raising certain questions at a price can't be tried in a court of law but those who had taken the bribe but failed to do the job could be prosecuted under the Prevention of Corruption Act. That's the law explained by a constitution Bench of the Supreme Court in April 1998 while deciding former Prime Minister P V Narasimha Rao's appeal against the Delhi high court judgment in the infamous JMM MPs bribery case.
 
A bribe giver does not enjoy protection under Article 105(2) of the Constitution whereas a bribed legislator does if he or she has fulfilled the obligation during the proceedings of the House, like raising the question or casting the vote on the floor of the House in favour of the bribe giver.
 
The provision for immunity from prosecution envisages that "No MP shall be liable to any proceedings in any court in respect of anything said or any vote given by him in Parliament or any committee thereof, and no person shall be so liable in respect of the publication by or under the authority of either House of Parliament of any report, papers, votes or proceedings".
 
A Bench headed by former Chief Justice S P Bharucha had said, "we are acutely conscious of the seriousness of the offence that the alleged bribe taker (JMM MPs and Ajit Singh) are said to have committed. If true, they bartered a most solemn trust committed to them by those they represented. By reason of the lucre that they received, they enabled a Government to survive. Even so, they are entitled to the protection that the Constitution plainly affords them. Our sense of indignation should not lead us to construe the Constitution narrowly, impairing the guarantee to effective Parliamentary participation and debate."
 
But they also held that "the alleged bribe takers, other man Ajit Singh, have the protection of Article 105(2) and are not answerable in a court of law for the alleged conspiracy and agreement. The charges against them must fail. Ajit Singh, not having cast a vote on the no-confidence motion, derives no immunity from Article 105(2)".
 
Besides Rao, former ministers Satish Sharma, Buta Singh (governor of Bihar now), V Rajeswar Rao, N . Ravanna, Ram Linga Reddy, all MPs, M Veerappa Moily the then Chief Minister of Karnataka, DK Adikeshavulu, M Thimmegowda and former Haryana Chief Minister Bhajan Lal faced the prosecution as bribe givers while Ajit Singh was tried for accepting the bribe.