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    Corruption: The Ticking Time Bomb

    July 07, 2009, 6:2 AM
    Recently I had the occasion to reminisce about my career in the Air Force. The milestone that prompted this introspection was the 39th Anniversary of my batch's commissioning into the Bhartiya Vayu Sena. I recalled with pride that glorious day last month, when Air Chief Marshal PC Lal, the then Chief of the Air Staff, pinned the Air Force flying badge - 'Wings' - onto my chest while I stood ram rod straight to receive this ultimate symbol of acceptance by the flying fraternity - a rite of passage, so to speak; a badge of honour and commitment. I remember that event clearly, like it happened yesterday!

    Let me be upfront about this: I joined the Air Force at that time, not because I wanted to belong to an Organisation run by highly rated professionals but for another, very selfish reason - to get a shot at flying fast jets. As years went by and now, as I look back, I know that I got a lot, lot more from that Service than I could have ever imagined or even anticipated. I am what I am thanks to the Indian Air Force.

    Sure, I got to fly the fast jets of the day right through my 31 year long flying career - Hunter, Marut, Gnat, the Mig series, Jaguar, Mirage, F-16, F-18 etc., but, I also got much more than that. I got to meet and befriend an exceptional bunch of people who always seemed to put the interest of others, ahead of their own. This bunch, somehow, managed to find time and more importantly
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    Corruption

    May 08, 2009, 1:1 PM
    One of the questions people keep asking me since my entry into politics is what we can do about corruption. What would I do, one citizen recently asked in an on-line chat, if I became the "concerned authority"? No such prospect - the Vigilance Commissioner isn't a Member of Parliament! - but in fact corruption is a national malaise and a social ill, not just one that a "concerned authority" can solve. We are all complicit - those who demand bribes and those who give them.

    But one of the things that intrigues me is the extent to which corruption is a middle-class preoccupation, when in fact the biggest victims of corruption in our country are in fact the poor. For the affluent, corruption is at worst a nuisance; for the salaried middle-class, it can be an indignity and a burden; but for the poor, it is often a tragedy.

    The saddest corruption stories I have heard are those where corruption literally transforms lives for the worse. There are stories about the pregnant woman turned away from a government hospital because she couldn't bribe her way to a bed; the labourer denied an allotment of land that was his due because someone else bribed the