Lokpal and Lokayukta

Syllabus: Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies

Context: Lokpal floated tender for seven BMW luxury cars worth ₹5 crore for members, drawing Opposition criticism over misplaced priorities.

Lokpal and Lokayukta Act, 2013

  • Legislative Framework
    • Enactment Purpose: Established Lokpal at Union level and Lokayukta at State level for corruption complaints against public functionaries.
    • 2016 Amendment: Enabled leader of single largest opposition party to join Lokpal selection committee without recognized Leader of Opposition.
      • Also amended Section 44 regarding asset and liability disclosure provisions.
  • Lokpal: Structure and Appointment
    • Composition
      • Chairperson with maximum eight members, ensuring 50% are judicial members.
      • Reservation: At least 50% total members from SC, ST, OBC, minorities and women.
      • Tenure: Five years or until 70 years age, whichever is earlier.
    • Selection Committee
      • President appoints after selection committee recommendations comprising
        • Prime Minister (Chairperson), 
        • Lok Sabha Speaker, 
        • Leader of Opposition 
        • Chief Justice of India 
        • one eminent jurist nominated by President.
    • Jurisdiction Coverage
      • Extensive Reach: Includes Prime Minister (except international relations, security, public order, atomic energy, space allegations), Ministers, Parliament members, and all Central Government officers (Groups A, B, C, D).
    • Powers and Functions
      • DSPE Superintendence: Exercises oversight over Delhi Special Police Establishment investigations for preliminary inquiries.
      • Investigation Powers: Authorizes agencies for document search and seizure during investigations.
      • CVC Coordination: Central Vigilance Commission reports complaint actions; Lokpal issues disposal guidelines.
      • Judicial Powers: Possesses civil court powers under Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 for preliminary inquiries.
  • Lokayukta: State-Level Framework
    • State Autonomy: Each state establishes Lokayukta through separate legislation with varying structure, eligibility, tenure and appointment methods.

Critical Issues

  • Whistleblower Protection Gap
    • Inadequate Immunity: Act fails providing concrete protection to complainants discouraging corruption reporting.
    • Reverse Penalty: Inquiry provisions against complainant when accused found innocent creates fear.
  • Structural Weaknesses
    • Appeal Limitations: Inadequate appeal provisions reduce process transparency significantly.
    • Political Influence: Selection committee’s political composition risks compromising Lokpal’s independence.
    • Ambiguous Criteria: No clear definition of “eminent jurist” enabling appointment manipulation.
  • Jurisdictional Concerns
    • PM Inclusion Debate: Enquiry into Prime Minister’s conduct by non-Parliamentary authority undermines government leadership capacity.
  • Other Lacunae
    • No constitutional backing
    • Seven-year complaint limitation
    • Judiciary exclusion
    • Unclear Lokayukta appointment provisions,
    • Investigation delays.

Reform Recommendations

  • Second ARC Suggestions
    • PM Exclusion: Remove Prime Minister from Lokpal purview preserving parliamentary supremacy.
    • Constitutional Status: Grant constitutional backing with financial autonomy enhancing institutional strength.
    • Power Distribution: Decentralize authority across multiple accountable institutions preventing excessive concentration.
  • 11th All India Lokayukta Conference (2012)
    • Nodal Agency Status: Make Lokayukta single point for all corruption complaints.
    • Enhanced Powers: Grant jurisdiction over state probe agencies, search and seizure powers, contempt proceedings authority.
    • Bureaucratic Coverage: Include all state bureaucrats under Lokayukta ambit.
    • Operational Autonomy: Ensure administrative and financial independence for effective functioning.
    • NGO Inclusion: Bring government-funded NGOs under Lokayukta jurisdiction.

Conclusion

  • Implementation Priority: Better execution of existing laws more crucial than creating additional legislation. As Publius Cornelius Tacitus observed, “the more corrupt the state, the more laws”—emphasizing quality enforcement over legislative quantity.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top