Thursday, November 1, 2018

Book review: Indira By Inder Malhotra

The book is a chronological account of  Indira Gandhi's life during her prime ministerial years. It would not be an exaggeration to call it the history of India from 1965 to 1985 because as summed up aptly during those years, "Indira was India and India was Indira". 

Indira Gandhi is considered the most profound personality of post-nehru India who has shaped the destiny of our nation, first as the daughter of prime minister Jawahar Lal Nehru and then Chief of Congress. Whatever our country's political system is today is a result of actions and reactions of the time of Indira's years.

The book outlines a few traits of Indira's personality. For example, her decisiveness and strong personality were an asset to the nation and made her the world leader India was looking for after the death of Nehru. The book is balanced in the view that it also highlights the negative side of her personality like her blind love for Sanjay and her high-headedness which sowed the seeds of destruction of Institutions which her father and Congress party had built so meticulously.

The book leaves a lot in terms of the personality dissection of Indira Gandhi and providing anecdotes from her life. Much of what is told in the book is already available in the public domain. However, coming from the mouth of one of the most respected journalist, it leads to greater credibility. 

Overall, I recommend the book for Bhakts who are blind with the vision of saffron India. This book will provide them some fodder for blasting congress as well as will melt away some of their misperceptions related to the history of India. This is also a good read for aspiring leaders who wish to know more about what does it take to lead a country and how to build institutions. 

  


Book review: Train to Pakistan by Khushwant Singh

The book by Khushwant Singh is a captivating read which provides a thrilling account of migration Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims at the time of partition of India. It tells a story of border village Mano Majra which is a habitat of both Muslims and Sikhs. However official machinations result in migration of Muslims to Pakistan. 

The book provides a parallel story track through various characters. One story is the love affair of Juggat Singh and Nooran. Whereas other is the story of Iqbal Singh a communist activist who is foreign educated and venturing in the foreign territory for some confused purpose. And the story of Hukum Chand magistrate and his keep adds more spice to the entire drama.  

On one hand, the author is able to bring out the complex emotions of people at the time of partition through various characters like the Inspector, gurudwara caretaker and Chief Maulana whereas it has also been able to bring out the dichotomy of ethics in characters of Hukum Chand. 

Overall, this novel is good enough to be adapted as a movie. Khushwant Singh proves his class of a gripping story-teller through this drama.


Why do I take metro every day to the office?

All of us are aware of the benefits of public transport. There are enough media marketing and government awareness programs around this thought and especially in the season of Diwali and stub-burning. Use of public transport as a response to an increase in pollution, global warming, heavy traffic helps in saving time, money as well as physical and mental resources. However, there are some other benefits which I would like to list here.
It keeps one rooted in the ground. When a senior officer stands in the queue and waits for his turn to enter in the metro rail, it breaks some of his artificial ego. His official benefits of 24*7 availability of the car, driver and other goods transport him to another world generally called as cloud nine. With this everyday experience, he understands the pain and suffering of others who yearn for better services in our routine life.
When an officer travels with his subordinate then it helps in melting away the yes-man tendencies of the subordinate and dominating attitude of the officer. They can work better as a team.  Their public behavior can set an example for the rest of the population which is called a common man of India.
Most importantly, it gives you enough time to read books, glance through daily newspaper or finish your unproductive activities like Facebook and WhatsApp before you reach office. This may not be possible in the car which you drive yourself or pool with someone else. There you may be bound to engage in conversation with the fellow traveler. Moreover, the metro provides proper lighting for the purpose of reading and sends a larger social message to the fellow travelers.

In this context, the government of India should mull making it compulsory for the government of India to use public transport where ever possible. This will be a good bridge between government and the governed.

The electronic data processing cadre

The president of Singapore codes the computer programs regularly His logic is simple. The computer is the present and future of this fast-paced automated world. India is expected to be a leader in this process of change and automation. We are the IT prowess of the world. With the help of homegrown IT giants, we have been able to change our image from a snake-charmer to champions of technology. However, our record of treating our technical staff at a lesser pedestal than the administrative staff in the government sector raises doubt over our willingness to lead the world.

In this regard, the role of electronic data processing cadre (EDP) in various government department holds utmost importance. The EDP cadre of the government is considered as a technical computer savvy wing of each department. Many such technical wings have performed a good role in the process of e-governance in their respective parent organizations. For example, EDP cadre of Income tax is expected to steer the process of digitization of the Income Tax department. It has played a huge role in making the process of income tax return filing a paperless and faceless system. However, they have never received their due rewards and often seen as tech-support in the hierarchical structure of the government. As a result, our process of digitization has suffered two-fold.

Firstly, the private sector has overtaken most of the work of EDP cadre. Thus, it threatens the national safety and raises a security concern. Rather than relying on our own cadre for data safety, we seem to bank more on private IT companies. This goes to the extent that a TCS low-to-mid level staff may have access to income tax database but not a senior level group A gazetted officer.

The second impact is growing to obsolesce of EDP cadre. The EDP cadre is reduced to a facilitator or liaison-officer with the private companies. This has made them irrelevant in the structure. Rather than being a technology specialist or at the least a technology manager, they have become people manager. And to add burn to this wound, let us not forget that people who they are supposed to manage are not employees of the government of India. Rather they are employees of the private organization who are accountable to their own hierarchy. This is definitely a serious trend with far-reaching consequences. It requires a strict course correction in a planned manner.  

The revival of EDP cadre
In order to revive EDP cadre, the government needs to act on 4 levels namely skill, structure, purpose, and power. We will take each of them one by one. As far as skill is concerned, the cadre should be put on the channel of continuous learning. The cadre should have the basic requirement of completing at least one technology certification every year. They should also mention a particular area of expertise and specialize in the same. Those who fail to upgrade their skills in due time should be flushed out of the system. For the people, who are already entrenched in their respective jobs and are unwilling to upgrade their skills, a way should be found to move them out to some other positions.

With respect to structure, we need to redefine the existing electronic data processing cadre into a technology cadre. Rather than each organization managing their own EDP cadre separately, a cadre like Indian Technology Services (ITS) should be constituted and all the technology wings of government department should be merged in this one. Be it EDP cadre of each department or NIC itself. Further, this cadre of ITS should have dedicated wings to serve army or state government or local department. This way the conflicts in each office like generalist vs specialist could also be resolved. Further, it will help in transforming the nature of governance from generalist to the specialists.

With regard to purpose, EDP cadre should be provided with a clear vision and purpose. Just like experts in DRDO are counted as scientist or research cadre, EDP cadre should be promoted to become subject expert in cybersecurity, data analytics, and any other technical matter. This need for subject expertise would provide the vision and purpose from the very beginning and thus will take away lethargy and irrelevance from the cadre.

Last but not least, they need to give powers vis-à-vis their counterparts in government or private sector. For example, if a member of Indian technology services is deputed to the technology wing of income tax department, then he should be authorized to look at the code, database, and network access. This will not only reduce our dependence on private vendors who have become big elephant difficult to be replaced over the years. It will also increase the government’s vigilance of the data that originally belong to the government itself.

This process of reform is not an easy deal. There will be a definite pushback from many quarters. The private players sitting on the legacy code for years, the existing EDP cadre which has slipped in the lethargy and developed a laid-back attitude and the generalist cadre who never want the technocrat to lead them or sit with them. It requires a certain degree of deep thinking, political vision, and strong leadership to take this idea forward through the labyrinthine of status-quoist power structure.