Adityanath, No Stranger To Criminal Cases, Promises Safer UP -Milan Vaishnav

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published Published on Mar 29, 2017   modified Modified on Mar 29, 2017
-NDTV

In his maiden appearance after being named Uttar Pradesh chief minister, Yogi Adityanath proclaimed that his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government would maintain a laser-like focus on the twin themes of combating corruption and restoring law and order. "In the past 15 years," Adityanath noted, "UP lagged behind in the race of development as previous governments indulged in corruption, nepotism, and failed on the law order front." Indeed, one of the new CM's first moves was to instruct his ministers and top bureaucrats to furnish their financial details within 15 days.

Adityanath's strong statements are encouraging, but also ironic, given that he has a serious rap sheet himself; the five-time BJP MP is named in three ongoing cases - including one linked to his suspected involvement in the 2007 communal riots which inflamed his Gorakhpur constituency.

As Adityanath gets to work, a new report issued by the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) ostensibly brings some much-needed cheer to the discourse surrounding India's political class. ADR, arguably India's leading good governance watchdog, has scrutinized the affidavits submitted by the newly elected Members of the Legislative Assemblies (MLAs) in the five states where elections recently concluded. These affidavits, which have become mandatory thanks to a 2003 Supreme Court judgment in response to litigation filed by ADR, contain details pertaining to candidates' financial assets and liabilities, criminal records, and educational qualifications.

Of the 689 MLAs analyzed across the five states - Goa, Manipur, Punjab, Uttarakhand, and Uttar Pradesh - 28 percent face ongoing criminal cases. This represents a five percentage point decline from their corresponding level in 2012. While this share grew in Manipur and Uttarakhand, it fell in the other states-most notably in Uttar Pradesh, where the crime-politics nexus is deeply entrenched. In UP, the share of MLAs with declared criminal cases decreased by ten percentage points - from 46 to 36 percent.

While Indians should be heartened by any decline in the level of political criminality, there are good reasons to treat this data with caution - especially in the case of UP.

For starters, the absolute levels of suspected criminality remain high, with the exception of Manipur (where just 3 percent of the state's 60 MLAs are implicated in ongoing cases). In UP and Uttarakhand, one in three legislators boast cases, while more than one in five Goan MLAs and one in seven Punjabi MLAs are similarly situated.  

Second, one should not extrapolate too much from one data point. The observed decline in Goa and UP might simply suggest a reversion to the mean. In UP, for instance, 35 percent of MLAs were named in criminal cases in 2007, which is roughly the current level. The same is true in Goa, where the share in 2007 is identical to today's share (23 percent). In both states, 2012 saw a jump in the proportion of MLAs facing cases.

Because the affidavit regime only began in 2003, we lack hard data on older elections. For UP, however, one can rely on private reports compiled by law enforcement and Election Commission sources. What these data show is that the trend level of criminality in the UP legislative assembly - dating back to 1991 - hovers around 30 percent. In the early post-independence era, individuals with criminal ties typically dwelled on the periphery of mainstream politics. Over time, they transitioned to centre-stage as electoral competition intensified. Goondas, who once worked in the employ of politicians, decided to become politicians themselves.

In UP, the share of MLAs with criminal cases was "just" 8 percent in 1984, rising to 12 percent in 1989. By 1991, that figure had jumped to 31 percent and has remained in that ballpark ever since. The two spikes the state has witnessed - in 2002 (51 percent) and 2012 (45 percent) - appear to be aberrations. Interestingly, both have coincided with periods of Samajwadi Party (SP) rule, which was widely known by its "Goonda Raj" moniker.

Third, while the share of MLAs with criminal cases has declined in these five states, there has actually been an uptick in the proportion of newly elected legislators who face "serious" cases. Serious cases involve criminal transgressions - including murder, kidnapping, and crimes against women - that would merit real jail time if a conviction were obtained. 20 percent of the nearly 700 MLAs ADR examined face serious criminal cases, which is a modest rise from their level five years ago (17 percent). In UP, this share has grown from 22 to 27 percent, while in Uttarakhand it has more than tripled, rising from 6 to 20 percent.

Therefore, the marriage between crime and politics is likely going nowhere fast. This is because the structural underpinnings of the market for criminality remain strong in many parts of the country.

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NDTV, 23 March, 2017, http://www.ndtv.com/opinion/adityanath-no-stranger-to-criminal-cases-promises-safer-up-1672536


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