IANS/Mumbai


Supporters of anti-corruption activist Anna Hazare dressed as Santa Claus burn an effigy
representing the government’s Lokpal bill, during a protest in Bhopal yesterday
Social activist Anna Hazare made a Christmas Day appeal to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to pass the “best possible” Lokpal bill as the anti-corruption campaigner prepared for a three-day fast here for a graft-free India.
But tension was in the air, with the Congress Party branding Hazare an “RSS agent” and questioning his language vis-à-vis politicians, and Hazare aide Arvind Kejriwal responding that the social activist was only an “India’s agent.”
Preparations were in full swing yesterday to spruce up the sprawling MMRDA (Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority) ground here where Hazare will fast tomorrow for the fourth time since April this year when he dramatically escalated the campaign for Lokpal.
Hazare, 74, will arrive here today. The three-day hunger strike will start tomorrow, with his aides expecting thousands to turn up in support of the soldier-turn-activist.
Hazare has urged people to court arrest across the country on January 30, in support of an effective Lokpal bill to check corruption in high places.
The activists of Hazare’s India Against Corruption (IAC) finalised security details for the ground, put up fire extinguishers at key spots, gave finishing touches to the VIP and media enclosures, and were readying medical facilities.
Some 200 labourers worked furiously, overseen by about 300 activists, half of them women. Police had already deployed 500 men at the ground.
The MMRDA ground is located in Bandra East which, the IAC members believe, the middle class supporters will find easier to access than the Azad Maidan in south Mumbai.
Activist Anjali Damani said close to 77,000 people had already registered for Hazare’s ‘Jail Bharo’ agitation and “more requests are pouring in.”
Hazare decided to fast after trashing as weak the government’s Lokpal bill introduced in parliament.
Congress general secretary Digvijay Singh called Anna an “RSS agent” saying there were photographs of Hazare with RSS veteran Nanaji Deshmukh.
“And he denied any association with RSS! Now whom do we believe Facts with Picture and the claim of RSS or Anna? I am again proved right,” he tweeted.
Hazare confidant Arvind Kejriwal dismissed the charge, saying it was an attempt to derail the movement.
Kiran Bedi, another of Hazare’s top aides, tweeted: “Does sharing of the dais make one each other’s agent. Next time should one sit alone? When two persons share a dais do they become each others agents?
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) said the Congress had “lost its mind” and that many Congress leaders knew Nanaji Deshmukh.
In what was seen as a final attempt to build bridges with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who Hazare has said is honest, the activist’s organisation yesterday urged him in an open letter to enact the “best possible” Lokpal bill.
IAC said while it was unhappy with the government’s Lokpal bill, it wanted the parliament to come out with the best anti-corruption legislation.
It suggested options to overcome the government’s reluctance to give autonomy to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), but said government bureaucrats should all be covered by the Lokpal.
The Lokpal bill introduced on December 22 in parliament has stated that the Lokpal will direct complaints against Group C and D employees to the Central Vigilance Commission.
The Mumbai ground has been booked in the name of Public Cause Research Foundation. Some Rs800,000 has been paid to the MMRDA for its use.
Hazare, who was suffering from cold and cough, is doing better.
“He is doing well on the health front and shall be coming to Mumbai on Monday,” an aide said in Hazare’s Ralegan Siddhi village in Maharashtra’s Ahmednagar district.
Hazare went on a five-day fast in support of an effective Lokpal bill for the first time in April, triggering nationwide solidarity protests. A worried government then held talks with him and his team.
Unhappy over the progress of events, Hazare launched his second and more successful fast spread over 12 days in Delhi’s Ramlila ground, this time forcing the parliament to agree to some of his key demands.
Hazare again fasted for a day here on December 11 to build up support for an effective Lokpal. The hunger strike starting in Mumbai tomorrow will be his fourth on the issue.