11 April 2011

Irina Shayk Sizzles in Sports Illustrated

In new swimwear campaign

This year she was crowned the 2011 Sports Illustrated Swimwear Edition cover girl - a coveted role that helped launch the careers of supermodels Heidi Klum and Tyra Banks.

And looking at these pictures, it is easy to see why.

Irina Shayk pours her stunning 34-23-35 figure into some swimsuits as the face of Miami designer Luli Fama's 2011 collection.

Smouldering: Irina Shayk sizzles in a new swimwear campaign

Smouldering: Irina Shayk sizzles in a new swimwear campaign

Christiano Ronaldo's girlfriend pouts and poses up a storm in the sizzling campaign as she models an array of colourful designs.

The 25-year-old gazes seductively at the camera wearing a bright purple string bikini with her brunette curls tumbling down her back.

In another shot, Irina models a black cutaway one-piece as she strikes a fierce pose by the pool.

There is plenty of skin on show in the tiny bikinis and sexy cutaway one-pieces, and Irina says her trim physique is down to a love of exercise and not starving herself.

Cover girl: Irina is the new face of Miami designer Luli Fama and appears in a collection of colourful swimwear Cover girl: Irina is the new face of Miami designer Luli Fama and appears in a collection of colourful swimwear

Cover girl: Irina is the new face of Miami designer Luli Fama and appears in a collection of colourful swimwear

Seductive: Christiano Ronaldo's girlfriend has said she loves going to the gym to keep her toned body in shape, but never diets

Seductive: Christiano Ronaldo's girlfriend has said she loves going to the gym to keep her toned body in shape, but never diets

She told StyleBistro recently: 'I never really diet. I think that a person can eat what she likes and do some exercises to be in shape- doesn't matter if it's going to be gym or swimming or walking in a park or pilates.

'It should be a pleasure as positive emotions always make you beautiful! I personally love going to [the] gym.'

Despite making her living as a swimwear and lingerie model, the Russian beauty attended the opening of a pool party in Las Vegas last week and kept her figure under wraps.

Cover up: Irina flaunts her figure in the new campaign but kept it under wraps at a recent pool party in Las Vegas Cover up: Irina flaunts her figure in the new campaign but kept it under wraps at a recent pool party in Las Vegas

Cover up: Irina flaunts her figure in the new campaign but kept it under wraps at a recent pool party in Las Vegas

Irina was asked to open the summer season of the TAO Beach at The Venetian hotel in Las Vegas at the weekend.

And while she was surrounded by bikini-clad party goers, Irina kept covered in a silk play suit.

Meanwhile her boyfriend helped his team Real Madrid to victory this week, scoring one of three goals that saw Real Madrid defeat Athletic Bilboa 3-0 at San Mames.

Kirsten Dunst is Laid Bare in Breathtaking Scenes From Her New Film Melancholia

She has been quiet on the career front for the past couple of years but Kirsten Dunst is set to make her big screen return in spectacular fashion next month.

The 28-year-old actress appears completely nude in the newly released trailer for her new film Melancholia, a beautifully shot drama written and directed by controversial Danish film-maker Lars Von Trier.

Scroll down to watch the trailer....

Laid bare: Kirsten Dunst appears naked in scenes from her new film Melancholia

Laid bare: Kirsten Dunst appears naked in scenes from her new film Melancholia

In the newly released trailer, Kirsten is seen lying naked in rocks next to a river then later in the the short clip being helped into the bath after collapsing on the bathroom floor - again completely nude.

The movie follows the story of Justine, played by Kirsten, as she marries Michael, played by Alexander Skarsgard.

During their wedding the party spots a red star in the sky which ends up being the planet Melencholia, which had been previously hiding behind the sun.

The world is ending: Justine slumps into a deep depression and in one scene is seen being helped into the bath

The world is ending: Justine slumps into a deep depression and in one scene is seen being helped into the bath

Drowning: Kirsten's character Justine begins to question her happiness on her wedding day

Drowning: Kirsten's character Justine begins to question her happiness on her wedding day

All star: The Lars Von Trier directed movie also features Keifer Sutherland and Alexander Skarsgard

All star: The Lars Von Trier directed movie also features Keifer Sutherland and Alexander Skarsgard

As the evening goes on, Justine begins to question what will happen to them if the world ends as well as her current happiness.

This results in her relationship with her sister Claire, played by Charlotte Gainsbourg, being put to the test.

The move also features Keifer Sutherland, in his first big screen performance since 2008's Mirrors, playing Claire's unusual and prickly husband.

Strange turn: The film sees Justine fight with her sister, played by Charlotte Gainsbourg,

Strange turn: The film sees Justine fight with her sister, played by Charlotte Gainsbourg,

No future: Justin begins to question her happiness just hours after tying the knot

No future: Justin begins to question her happiness just hours after tying the knot

Kirsten, who rose to fame as a child star appearing alongside Brad Pitt in the movie Interview With A Vampire, for which she was nominated for a Golden Globe at just 13 years old.

She then made a name for herself in the Spiderman franchise alongside Toby Maguire but has been relatively quiet on the work front since the films third instalment in 2007. 

Lars von Trier, the film's director, is known for his controversial use of explicit imagery in mainstream movies and has won several awards at the prestigious Cannes Film Festival.

Melancholia is released in the U.S. on May 26 2011.

Life threatening: The two women find their relationship put to the test as a neighbouring planet threatens to collide into the earth

Life threatening: The two women find their relationship put to the test as a neighbouring planet threatens to collide into the earth

Condom Ad Fuelling Sex Trafficking

condom

A recent report by a Delhi-based NGO suggests so.

New Delhi, Apr 11 : Using a condom is a good idea, right? But, a recent advertisement campaign advocating the usage of the contraceptive has allegedly led to an increase in the number of human trafficking cases.

According to a report available with Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) figures, there are currently three million human trafficking victims in India - 1.2 million are children.

National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) figures indicate that the average age of those who fall victim to human trafficking is between nine and thirteen years. There has been a staggering rise in the number of persons involved in human trafficking in the country - the figure has increased 17 times in the past decade.

In a 3-day conference under the banner Coalition Against Trafficking of Women Asia- Pacific (CATW) it was discussed that a condom campaign is also a reason behind the increase in trafficking cases.

"There was a campaign which said it doesn't matter which sex worker you choose, but choose the right condom. This creates the notion that it is fine to have intercourse with sex workers.

But women and underage children are often forced into prostitution and the demand is growing," said Ruchira Gupta, founder of Apne Aap Worldwide.

The report also says that increasing mobile phone and internet penetration has given rise to forcefully engaging women and children into prostitution.

According to recent findings, the maximum traffic coming to popular international porn websites is from India. Around 70 per cent traffic from India comes to these sites.

Moreover the latest mobile applications are also used to access pornography websites, which has also led to an increase in demand for sex workers, leading to more trafficking.


AD trouble? A survivor of sex trafficking, Fatima, with her son.


Sex trafficking victims from various Asia-Pacific countries have also demanded amendment to laws to include stricter penalties that can act as a deterrent to those involved in flesh trade and ensure better protection for women in the country.

Victims and advocates from 25 countries, including India, Nepal, Philippines, Japan, South Korea and Australia, most of whom opposed legalising prostitution and punishment for 'buyers' in sex trade and demanded greater investment in welfare of girls and women from governments.

"We will primarily call for the removal of provisions in our laws that criminalise women in prostitution and put provisions that will criminalise the buyers and the business. These laws shall include extradition of traffickers and buyers," said Ruchira.

For Fatima Nat Dhuniya, who was trapped in flesh trade as a child and managed to escape, the thought of legalising prostitution is unthinkable.

"When women in my community and those who had been sex workers earlier heard that the government was mulling legalising prostitution, we decided that we will beat such people up.

Don't they think of sisters or daughters at home? As long as there are buyers there will not be an end to sex trafficking," said Dhuniya.
What is to blame

The increase in the use of technology for exploitative purposes (from sexual or pornographic, to trafficking in persons or a combination of offences) has been attributed to:

* More generalised access to internet
* Increased number of internet users each year
* Increased affordability of technology and services
* Anonymity of users
* Speed - it is fast (leaving only digital traces)
* Criminals can work from home (although the crime itself can affect victims and have consequences in several countries)
* Difficulty to trace (criminals can operate in many countries)
* The high profitability of the sale of pornography relative to the investment required.

WikiLeaks Takes Credit For Anna Hazare's Anti-Corruption Campaign

Revelations by the WikiLeaks are having a positive impact, believes its founder Julian Assange, who claims that the publication of secret US embassy cables by the Indian media had helped inspire an anti-graft movement in the country.

WikiLeaks takes credit for Anna Hazare's anti-corruption campaign

Questioned at a public debate about the whistleblowing organisation's own transparency, Assange told an audience of 700 people, many of them supporters: "We are directly supported on a week-to-week basis by you.

You vote with your wallets every week if you believe that our work is worthwhile or not. If you believe we have erred, you do not support us. If you believe we need to be protected in our work, you keep us strong."

"That dynamic feedback, I say, is more responsive than a government that is elected after sourcing money from big businesses every four years," the Guardian quoted the Australian as saying in his first formal public appearance since being arrested in December following accusations of rape and sexual assault.

The WikiLeaks founder, who is currently appealing against his extradition to Sweden to face allegations of sexual assault, told the audience at a packed debate organised by the New Statesman and the Frontline Club that whistleblowing was essential in a democracy because "the only way we can know whether information is legitimately kept secret is when it is revealed".

He cited the examples of Vietnam and "the disaster that was the Iraq war", saying that if whistleblowers had the courage to speak up earlier about both conflicts, "bloodbaths" could have been avoided.

WikiLeaks takes credit for Anna Hazare's anti-corruption campaign

He said he "could speak for hours" about the impact of the publication of leaked US embassy cables, much of it through the Guardian, and that leak's positive impact.

The Hindu newspaper had in recent weeks published 21 front pages based on so-called "cablegate" revelations, Assange said, leading to the Indian opposition walking out four times from the Parliament and a growing anti-corruption movement in the country.

A US embassy cable made public by WikiLeaks had suggested that the UPA government had allegedly paid bribes to buy MPs in support of a trust vote on the Indo-US nuclear deal, creating a furore and prompting denials by the government.

Source: PTI

Second And Final Phase Of Polling Under Way in Assam

assam-elections 2011Guwahati, Apr 11 : The second and final phase of polling is under way in Assam amid tight security on Monday morning.

The polling is taking place in 64 Assembly constituencies in 14 districts of Central and Lower Assam.

The polling began at 7 am on Monday morning and will continue till 3 pm.

Tight security arrangements have been made to avoid any violence.

73% of polling was recorded in first phase of polling, which was held on April 4.

A total of 96,77,113 electorate will decide the fate of 596 candidates, including two-time former chief minister and opposition leader Prafulla Kumar Mahanta, opposition Asom Gana Parishad (AGP) president Chandra Mohan Patowary and senior ministers Himanta Biswa Sarma and Rockybul Hussain.

Security has been tightened in sensitive Bodoland Territorial Council (BTC) area in lower Assam and in Indo-Bhutan and Assam-Meghalaya border, official sources said.

Indira Weis: Playboy's desi girl

Achtung!

Achtung!
The India-connection is evident in Indira Weis' features. The German singer and actress has also modelled for Playboy magazine. Indira's real name is Verena, and Indira is her nickname, that relatives from her mother's side gave her when she visited India.
Photo: Indira Weis attends the Felix Burda Award Gala 2011 at Hotel Adlon on April 10, 2011 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)

Indira Weis on the cover of Playboy magazine.

Indira Weis arrives for the 57th annual Bambi Awards at the International Congress Center on December 1, 2005 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)

Actress Indira Weis attends the 'Inside Deep Throat' Party of the 55th annual Berlinale International Film Festival at Soprano restaurant on February 13, 2005 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Contestant Indira Weis from Germany's 'I'm A Celebrity, Get Me Out Of Here' poses for a portrait on January 29, 2011 in Gold Coast, Australia. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images for Bild am Sonntag)

Indira Weis arrives for the 57th annual Bambi Awards at the International Congress Center on December 1, 2005 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)

Actress Indira Weiss attends the world premiere of the film 'Das Parfum' September 7, 2006 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Actress Indira Weis attends the 'Inside Deep Throat' Party of the 55th annual Berlinale International Film Festival at Soprano restaurant on February 13, 2005 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Contestant Indira Weis from Germany's 'I'm A Celebrity, Get Me Out Of Here' poses for a portrait on January 29, 2011 in Gold Coast, Australia. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images for Bild am Sonntag)

Contestant Indira Weis from Germany's 'I'm A Celebrity, Get Me Out Of Here' poses for a portrait on January 29, 2011 in Gold Coast, Australia. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images for Bild am Sonntag)

Actress Indira Weis and Constantin Film executive Thomas Friedl attend the 'Inside Deep Throat' Party of the 55th annual Berlinale International Film Festival at Soprano restaurant on February 13, 2005 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Indira Weis attends the Felix Burda Award Gala 2011 at Hotel Adlon on April 10, 2011 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)

Indira Weis attends the Felix Burda Award Gala 2011 at Hotel Adlon on April 10, 2011 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images)

China Entices Myanmar as India Struggles to ‘Look East’

By Shruti Pandalai

asean_indiaThe Chinese National Petroleum Corporation has offered aid worth $6 million to Myanmar for building hospitals. This is no philanthropy, but an exercise aimed at pushing Myanmar to speed up laying the planned 878 km-long crude pipeline. In other words, a move to secure China’s access to Myanmar’s oil reserves.1 Simultaneously, a 2,389 km pipeline from Kyakphu in Myanmar to China’s Yunnan province is also being pursued. In 2010, the Asian giant pumped the largest investment into the junta’s coffers, estimated at $8.17 billion.2 China’s strides will, expectedly, fuel competition with India, which is energy hungry as well as concerned about encirclement by the red dragon. Indian initiatives in developing infrastructure, education facilities and aggressive bids for stakes in oil and gas in Myanmar with a focus on the North East have been obvious. However, is all of this too little, too late?

New Delhi’s interest in the North East Region has often been critiqued as security-obsessed and not oriented towards “genuine economic development and trade promotion.”3 Trade through the main border points mutually identified as Moreh (in Manipur) and Champhai (in Mizoram) have not lived up to the hype.4 The Myanmar Government has asked for strengthening the existing Moreh post so as to reap its full potential, before proposed trade points at Lungwa/Ledo, Pongru and Pokhungri in Nagaland and Nampong, Vijayanagar and Khimiyang in Arunachal Pradesh are agreed upon.5

Moreh’s official trade is only a fraction of its expanding grey market, reflecting that border trade is in total disarray with no clarity as to who is in-charge.6 Obstacles in legal transactions, lack of regulation by Myanmar on transiting third country goods especially from China and threat of non-state actors hassling traders in strong turf wars, have all left no incentive to develop commerce. Instead, trade has shifted to Tamu’s Namphalong market in Myanmar, disappointing local entrepreneurs in Manipur. This is just one case in point.

It is not just the numbers that seem bleak. Experts at an IDSA workshop “Imperative of Infrastructure Development for developing Indo-Myanmar Relations” stressed that de-hyphenating economic development in the North East from the goal of constructive presence in Myanmar would be a zero-sum exercise. The logic being that unless the Indian side of the border sees development, trying to improve connectivity and energy access on the other side would meet logistical failure.. In any event, India’s current commitments in Myanmar seem to have been already outpaced by China.

According to reports, PetroChina “is constructing a four billion cubic meter gas depot at Hutubi in the border province of Xinjiang to make the most of gas piped from Myanmar.”7 In contrast, as former Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran notes, “The problem with India’s energy interests in Myanmar is that even if it develops A1 to A7 energy blocks or any other offshore Bay of Bengal blocks, how will be it be transported back to India? [...] At present, we only hold a 30 per cent stake in A1 and A3 blocks, and that too we are forced to sell to China because of the absence of a proper pipeline between India and Myanmar.”8

Infrastructure bottlenecks remain in all of the India-initiated rail, road, power and energy related projects. The IDSA workshop suggested that New Delhi must focus “on infrastructure up to Tripura” and deal with logistic loopholes if execution of plans in Myanmar is desired. The detailed project report on the 2000 MW Tamanthi river project in Chindwin signed in 2008 is still being updated to get the requisite approvals.9 This is where China takes the game away from India. China acts, India deliberates.

Coming to specifics, in the field of power-generation, the dilemma seems to be between power requirement and the potential harnessed. While the North East grapples with a severe power shortage, there has not been any effort to better utilise the Arunachal Basin, which, moreover, delivers below capacity because of the narrow nature of its corridor. An alternative, in the view of experts, is to first ensure power surplus from the Arunachal Basin over and above the demands of the north east, which, they ambitiously claim, is possible. Second, it is important to sell the concept of dedicated power plants in Nagaland, Manipur and Arunachal. These must be insulated projects that focus on providing output to markets in Myanmar and Bangladesh with specific tariff regulations. This could work as an incentive for authorities on both sides of the border.

The immense potential of inland waterway arrangements as an efficient means of transport also remains largely unexploited. Currently, the emphasis seems to be solely on the Kaladan Multimodal Transit Project, which envisages connectivity between Indian ports on the east and the Sittwe Port in Myanmar coupled with riverine transport and road connectivity to Mizoram. This provides an alternate route for transporting goods to North East India, and will thus boost trade ties.10

This is an important project, considering the pressure on the Siliguri Corridor and Bangladesh’s continued refusal to allow transit rights through its territory to the North-East. While project completion is expected by 2013, logistical issues of river engineering like dredging, removal of rock outcrops, rapids, lack of navigation aids, etc., combined with environmental concerns, may delay its dividends.11 In such a scenario, experts note that India must better use its current MoU with Bangladesh on Inland Water Transport, which has so far only been semi-operational, neglected and subject to the whims of the Bangladeshi authorities.

India is already watching nervously as China pushes ahead with the re-building of the historic “Stillwell Road”12. 61 kms of the stretch lies in India, 1,033km falls in Myanmar and 632 km in China. Naturally, relentless Chinese efforts resulted in the contract being awarded to a Chinese construction company, which has already begun work on the 194 mile stretch from Myitkyina in Myanmar to the Pangsau Pass in Arunachal Pradesh, close to the Indian border.13

India has not begun to build its side of the road. Opinion stands divided. Indian businessmen strongly feel that this road, which is now almost unusable and prone to interdiction by insurgents, could be the key for the economic success of the North East. Rebuilding it will help re-establish the region’s trade ties with western China and South East Asia. The government, in contrast, sees this as a risky investment, given security concerns about China’s territorial claims to Arunachal Pradesh as well as the challenge of battling insurgent groups currently operating in the region.14

Many cross-border highways planned to connect India with Myanmar and beyond are still works in progress. The ambitious Rhi-Tidim and Rhi-Falam road projects, the Moiwa-Chindwin-Thailand trilateral highway project as well as trans-rail networks are still being refined.15 So far, only the Tamu-Kalaywa-Kalemyo Road connecting Moreh to Myanmar has been completed. Complaints of neglect have, however, surfaced about the road from Imphal that feeds into Moreh, which is symptomatic of the general approach.
Experts from the Border Road Organisation have flagged real concerns. Logistically, not only is the North East region remote, it is also short on resources, and the soil, moreover, does not support the type of stones required for tar roads. More often than not, project costs do not include budgets for transporting heavy machines and equipment to these areas, which then translates into delays. Local quarrying affects the geographical balance of the region, which often destabilises the foundations of the roads laid. Overall, unlike China, India lacks in skilled manpower, which is a glaring shortcoming. Both in quality and quantity China seems to be at an advantage. This perhaps explains BRO’s establishment of a China Study Group with the specific mandate of assessing rapid infrastructure build up near Tibet and the north east.

China’s strides in Myanmar have been well planned and executed. Beijing backed the military-led Junta when it was internationally isolated and doled out infrastructure support and soft loans long before India decided to look east. India’s image as a vibrant democracy and the strategic and economic need to counter Chinese influence in Myanmar will make policy options a lot tougher. Yet, what can be done now is to fully implement and leverage the existing framework and ensure that it delivers.

  1. 1. Saibal Dasgupta, “China’s sweetener to speed up pipeline through Myanmar,” Times of India, April 7, 2011.
  2. 2. “Chinese investment in Myanmar tops $8bn this year,” Reuters, August 16, 2010,
    reuters.com/article/2010/08/16/idINIndia-50868920100816.
  3. 3. L. S. Singh, “Indo-Myanmar Relations in the greater perspective of India’s Look East Policy,” in Thingnam Kishan Singh, ed., Look East Policy and India's North: East Polemics and Perspectives (2009).
  4. 4. Ibid.
  5. 5. Ministry of Development of North East Region, http://mdoner.gov.in/index2.asp?sid=127.
  6. 6. L. S. Singh, op. cit.
  7. 7. Saibal Dasgupta, op. cit.
  8. 8. “India’s strategic interests in Myanmar: An interview with Shyam Saran,” by M. Chaturvedi http://www.ipcs.org/pdf_file/issue/SR98-ShyamSaranInterview.pdf.
  9. 9. www.mea.gov.in.
  10. 10. Ministry of Development of North East Region, http://mdoner.gov.in/writereaddata/sublink2images/KaladanMultiModal2172726384.htm.
  11. 11. Executive Summary of DPR for Port & IWT, http://iwai.nic.in/misc/portiwt.pdf.
  12. 12. Stillwell Road was a route from India used by the British and American troops to supply Chinese troops against Japan during WW II. See, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/8243834/China-plans-to-rebuild-Burmas-World-War-Two-Stilwell-Road.html.
  13. 13. Subir Bhaumik, “Will the famous Indian WWII Stilwell Road reopen?,” February 8, 2011, www.bbc.co.uk http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-12269095.
  14. 14. Ibid.
  15. 15. “India’s strategic interests in Myanmar: An interview with Shyam Saran,” op.cit.

Breaching Citadels

By Harsh Mander

That accountability is vital in a democracy was reinforced at a National Convention of the National Campaign for the People's Right to Information held in Shillong recently…


If governments do not investigate corruption, people should have the right and power to do so themselves.


An Empowering weapon...

When the idea of a people's legal right to information took initial shape in the dusty villages of Rajasthan nearly two decades ago amidst people's struggles for work and wages, few could have predicted how profoundly this idea would alter and deepen democracy across this vast land. The State penetrates virtually every aspect of a person's life in modern India, and governments run many programmes which are critical for the survival of millions of impoverished people. But although governments are elected by the people in the Indian republic, they tend to function as masters rather than public servants. Like masters, they feel none ‘outside' government should have the right to question whether government decisions are honest, or lawful, or fair. How can masters ever be subject to such questioning?

Therefore, the Right to Information law passed by Indian Parliament in 2005 has proved to be the most significant reform in public administration since the people of India gave themselves a secular democratic Constitution in 1950. This statute established that people have the right to question all public servants who they pay with their taxes. It is an instrument in the hands of the people to claim democracy, and support and strengthen their struggles. It enables them to question — and battle without arms — their governments.

In so doing, it has transformed and deepened democracy in ways that were difficult to imagine when village folk first demanded and secured that piece of official paper — a ‘muster roll'. Armed with this humble document, for the first time in centuries of history of public works in famines and droughts, villagers were able to know who village officials claimed were paid wages and how much.

In my own years as a district official in impoverished tracts of India, I often agonised about the helplessness of poor people when public money intended for them was looted with impunity. This was money to feed them in times of drought, supply subsidised grain, run schools for their children and health-centres when they are sick, or offer pensions for the aged. People could do little more than petition government again and again, mostly to be turned away. The few battles against corruption by those in and outside public office seemed doomed to be lonely, eccentric and ultimately to collapse in failure. I wondered how democracy could so short-change the masses of the indigent and oppressed of our land.

Like all the world's greatest ideas, the answer was disarmingly simple. If governments do not investigate corruption, people should have the right and power to do so themselves. For this they needed to be armed with official information, which they should get as a right. And what were the limits to information which people could demand? Another simple but incontrovertible principle emerged. Whatever information people's representatives can demand in Parliament and the legislatures, cannot be barred from the sovereign people who elect them.

In the five years since the passage of this law, ordinary people have bravely, creatively, often anarchically breached bastions of official authority. In March 2011, in the crisp cool spring of Shillong, an extraordinary diversity of some of these motley ‘soldiers of information' converged from every corner of this country for a National Convention called by the National Campaign for the People's Right to Information. A Governor, retired Chief Justices of the Supreme Court and High Courts, and senior public officials rubbed shoulders with poor landless farm workers, young students and teachers, and activists, to celebrate — with speeches, slogans, song, parody and theatre — this law which gave them hope and power over corrupt governments.

Hard won

None of these battles was easily won, and the murder of at least 17 persons for seeking official information was a reminder of how perilous these efforts can be, how threatened remain these gains, and how resolutely they need to be defended. Every public official still takes a pledge of secrecy rather than of transparency when they assume office. Virtually every high office, whether of the President, the Prime Minister, the cabinet, and the Judges of the Supreme Court, have claimed at one time or another that they should be kept out of the reach of this law. Ninety per cent of Central and State Information Commissions are packed with retired civil servants, who come from an official culture which has historically resisted regimes of transparency. Delegates to the Shillong convention from every corner of the country testified how officials still routinely refuse to disclose information, and reported facing delay, stone-walling, evasion, discourtesy, intimidation and threats when they seek information.

And yet there were wonderful stories of small but significant local triumphs. People spoke of local exposures through people's audits of postmen who stole the pensions of the aged, village officials who built roads and wells only on paper, subsidised rice which reached mills and private retail instead of government subsidised ration shops, teachers who did not teach and pinched the meals of the children, and hospitals without doctors and medicine. All these have been the staple of life of the poor since generations. But today they know and can question. In Andhra Pradesh, social audits of village public works exposed corruption of the scale of 100 crore rupees, and 30 crores have been returned by corrupt officials and representatives.

Even more significant than battling corruption with RTI are new and unexpected ways to hold governments accountable for upholding rights to life and liberty, protecting against discrimination, and defending human rights. In Bhilwada, Rajasthan, a dalit computer operator offered water to an upper caste bus conductor, and was thrashed. The local police refused to file his complaint. He then filed an RTI application asking how many complaints are pending with the police of atrocities against dalits, and what action the police have taken on these. As a result, police filed not only his complaint but also 200 others which were long pending with them, under the SC ST Atrocities Act. Those who beat him up were arrested.

The Rajasthan government issued a circular in 2007 that all homeless persons were eligible for house pattas or tenure rights for the lands on which their dwelling units stand. But many Panchayats withheld these because of caste prejudice against dalits. Activists then filed RTI applications asking what Panchayats have done to implement these orders. As a result, 650 dalits got house pattas. They have now organised themselves to file similar RTI applications in all 32 districts of Rajasthan.

In Gujarat, survivors of mass communal violence in 2002 found that the entire criminal justice system — police, prosecution, courts — stacked against them, in ways that it seemed almost impossible to bring those who slaughtered, raped and burnt their homes to justice. But in our work with them, we discovered that RTI can even help resist this subversion of justice. For instance, police would record their statements falsely, erasing from these the names of the accused as well as the witnesses, so that later they could walk free. But now as soon as they make any statement to the police, they have learned to ask for copies immediately under RTI. They have filed several hundred RTI applications, and found that this has made police and courts recognise that they cannot openly flaunt legal processes to protect those who conducted the slaughter.

Effective weapon

These were exhilarating accounts of ways that RTI has brought accountability of the State to its common citizens, not just for official acts of corruption but also of discrimination.

But there was not just hope, but also despair. Delegates from Kashmir and Manipur wept as they spoke of filing RTI applications asking whether their loved ones who were abducted by security forces years earlier were dead or alive. They have knocked every door, but got no reply. These were sobering reminders that whereas RTI can help breach many citadels of official power, it has not yet altered its fundamental paradigms.