Friday, July 20, 2012

Accept or Reject without a Reason

The Term “Accept or Reject without a Reason” Is The most Misused term across Government contracts – and for Shamefully Corrupt Purposes

Without even one iota of doubt, there is an urgent need for the government or the judiciary to pass strictures against this clause and ensure that the power to accept or reject contracts is via transparent means and not through unilaterally decided arbitrary decisions that cannot even be questioned at a later date. Just look at the putrefied list of our gloriously corrupt government representatives and you start understanding why this clause has become a debauched, unethical entity.

AICTE’s Chairman R. A. Yadav was suspended in 2009 under a corruption case, while AICTE member secretary K. Naryan Rao was even arrested. In the same year, former Jharkhand chief minister Madhu Koda was arrested in a case of disproportionate assets. Ramachandran Nair, CEO, LIC Housing Finance was arrested in 2010, again on charges of bribery charges. A. K. Srivastava, CMD, Nalco was arrested in February 2011, of course, on bribery charges. Secretary General of CWG organising committee Lalit Bhanot, former telecom minister A. Raja, and more, the list simply does not seem to stop.

Our proposed solution to resolve corruption by getting rid of the clause, obviously sounds too simplistic by itself. But wonderfully, the most complicated problems in the world have had quite simple solutions. With the government running away from owning up to the issue, it’s obviously the judiciary that has to get working. Well, we guess even the judiciary has to clean up its house first of all. The Tis Hazari Courts, in their tender for purchasing aerosol insecticide, writes, “The Purchase Committee reserves the right to accept or reject any tender without assigning any reason whatsoever.” Way to go judiciary, way to go!