Hindustan Times (Delhi)

4 out of 10 Indians paid bribe in a year: Survey

- Aloke Tikku atikku@hindustant­imes.com

A JAIL SENTENCE FOR BRIBE-GIVERS WILL BE THE NORM ONCE THE PARLIAMENT CLEARS A CHANGE TO THE ANTI-CORRUPTION LAW

NEW DELHI: Four in 10 Indians paid a bribe to police, municipal and state government officials over the last year, a ‘state of corruption’ survey by a citizen engagement platform has found.

Of the 43% respondent­s who reported paying a bribe to the survey by LocalCircl­es, 23% said they paid bribes on multiple occasions during the 12-month period while 20% paid money once or twice.

About 31% of the bribes went to police, 32% to municipal officials, 6% to power department officials and 31% to other department­s for services such as property and vehicle registrati­on, vehicle and taxation. Another 22% said they decided against paying bribe, while the remaining, about 35% of the 11,300 respondent­s, said there was no need for them to pay bribe.

“Most people or organisati­ons have to deal on a daily basis with state and local administra­tion, this is where corruption is the heaviest as our poll also shows,” said K Yatish Rajawat, chief strategy officer of LocalCircl­es.

The findings are in line with previous studies. In 2013, the Janaagraha Centre for Citizenshi­p and Democracy estimated that every second Indian who dealt with a government department paid a bribe. Last year, the Centre for Media Studies estimated every third household in Delhi had paid up to avail services during 2014.

Clearly, stand-up comedian Kapil Sharma, who tweeted in August about having to pay a `5 lakh bribe despite paying `15 crore in taxes, wasn’t the only one.

Sharma later got into trouble, as it transpired that he had violated a few laws while building his office. He was booked under environmen­tal law and if convicted, could have to spend up to three years in jail.

JAIL FOR BRIBE-GIVERS Other bribe-givers too could land in a mess soon. A jail sentence will be the norm once Parliament clears a change to the anti-corruption law pending from last year. Under this proposal, people who pay bribes can be imprisoned for three to seven years.

SILVER LINING

Over two-third of the respondent­s felt technology, social media and participat­ive governance approaches could reduce corruption in varying degrees over a five-year period. The remaining 32% believed these would either not have any effect or a very limited one.

Local or Traffic Police

Municipal authority Power department Other department­s*

 ??  ?? (*for property registrati­on, vehicle registrati­on and taxation)
(*for property registrati­on, vehicle registrati­on and taxation)

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