14. Delhi Jan Lokpal Bill
The draft Bill envisages a
system where a corrupt person found guilty would
go to jail within two years of the complaint
being filed and his ill-gotten wealth
confiscated.
The Delhi government on
Wednesday cleared the much-awaited Jan Lokpal
Bill and it is likely to be tabled in the
Assembly next week. The Bill brings the Chief
Minister’s office under its purview and ensures
that any investigation and trial by the Lokpal
has to be completed within six months. Even as
the Winter session of the Assembly opened on
Wednesday at the Old Secretariat, Chief Minister
Arvind Kejriwal along with his Cabinet ministers
cleared the Jan Lokpal Bill.
Addressing a gathering,
Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia said that
Cabinet meeting, specially called for clearing
the Jan Lokpal Bill, was held at the Cabinet
meeting room in the Old Secretariat ‘to make the
moment special’.
The draft Bill envisages a
system where a corrupt person found guilty would
go to jail within two years of the complaint
being filed and his ill-gotten wealth
confiscated. It also envisages power to the Jan
Lokpal to prosecute politicians and bureaucrats
without government permission. The Bill also
envisages CAG audit in the cases.
The Jan Lokpal Bill
(Ombudsman Bill) is an anti-corruption Bill
drawn up by activists seeking the appointment of
an independent body that would investigate
corruption cases, complete the investigation and
trial in a time-bound manner. Once passed and
notified, people will be able to complain
directly and imprison corrupt politicians and
bureaucrats under the law.
Soon after clearing the
Bill, Manish Sisodia in a series of tweets
wrote, “The historic Delhi Jan Lokpal Bill is
passed by Delhi Cabinet. Congrats to all who
have spent days and nights for it. Congrats
delhi...#hereislokpal. Jo kaha so kiya.”
The Bill is on the lines of
the Lokpal Bill of Uttarakhand, which was
drafted by Arvind Kejriwal and Manish Sisodia in
2011.
Sources said that the Bill
was cleared in a rush as the party drew flak
from the Opposition as the Bill till Wednesday
afternoon wasn’t listed in the Winter Session.
In fact, the BJP leaders during the session
asked why it wasn't being passed despite the Aam
Aadmi Party being the majority in the Assembly.
The Congress, which has failed to win any seats
in the Assembly, protested outside the Vidhan
Sabha.
However, this is the second
time that the AAP-government has cleared the
Bill. In February 2014, the government cleared
the Bill but didn’t send it to the Lieutenant-
Governor. L-G Najeeb Jung, had raised objection
regarding this to the Union Home Ministry.