Bribery In India: A Website For Whistleblowers

website work to report bribery/corruption  

7 members have voted

  1. 1. would a website work in the RP to report corruption

    • yes
    • no
    • just cause more problems/not in this lifetime
  2. 2. if a website did exist, do you think it would make any noticable changes

    • YES
    • NO
    • just business as usual/not in this lifetime
  3. 3. do you think in other countries a site like this would make a difference?



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Call me bubba
Posted
Posted (edited)

I had previously asked another member .what if there was a site/forum to report corruption.other such issues.the reply i received. was that if a "foreigner" did something like this, Problems may exist.when he/she enters or leaves the RP .ok i understand their concern.with all the small changes that has occurred around the world.Could this be the time for such a website.Could this website actually help the common person.regular businessman?below is the article, Imagine if you had to pay a bribe to see your newborn baby, get your water supply connected or obtain your driving licence. It's an everyday fact of life in India - but campaigners are now using people power and the internet to fight back. _53101360_transport-commissioner-bhas.jpg Transport commissioner Bhaskar Rao has reformed his department with the help of ipaidabribe.com data "Uncover the market price of corruption," proclaims the banner on the homepage of ipaidabribe.com. It invites people to share their experiences of bribery, what a bribe was for, where it took place and how much was involved. Launched in August, the site gives Indians a chance to vent their frustrations and shine a spotlight on the impact of corruption on everyday life. "I did the driving test correctly but still the official said I was driving too slow, I realised his intention so gave him 200 Rupees and got the thing done," is a typical example of a posting. “Start Quote

We are all also responsible because we end up paying the darn bribes because otherwise you can never get anything done in India”

End Quote Swati Ramanathan ipaidabribe.com The website was the brainwave of Ramesh and Swati Ramanathan, founders of a not-for-profit organisation in Bangalore called Janaagraha which literally means "people power". "Bribery is routinely expected in interactions with government officials", Swati Ramanathan told me, "to register your house, to get your driving licence, domestic water connection, even a death certificate." Having lived in the US and the UK for several years, they were dismayed on their return to see how widespread corruption had become and decided to do something about it. "We are all also responsible because we end up paying the darn bribes because otherwise you can never get anything done in India. "We said, 'It's not enough to moralise, we need to find out what exactly is this corruption? What's the size of it?'" 'High reward' The website has evolved into a consumer comparison site where people can also get information and advice in different languages on how to avoid paying bribes. One man told me how he got round paying a bribe to register his mother's house. "I went with all the paperwork and at first they looked through it and said, 'Oh, I think one of the documents is not up to date.' Bribes Paid, and Unpaid

"What I had been told at the website is that this is one of the excuses they make to take a bribe, and what we need to do is tell them, 'OK, give it to me in writing with your stamp and seal, and I will make sure I get these documents the next time so that I can get it registered.'" "The moment I said that, they backed off and said, 'No, no, it's OK, we will pass it through.'" So far, nearly 10,000 bribe experiences have been reported across 347 cities and 19 government departments. As the numbers mount, Swati Ramanathan hopes the website will become a powerful tool for shaming government departments into tackling corruption. "There is so little risk to being corrupt in our country and so high a reward," she explained. "The moment you change the equation and you make it riskier, the reward becomes less. You make it riskier by making it public." Hurt pride One of the website's early successes has been with the State Transport Department of Karnataka, which was repeatedly cited in bribe reports - prompting transport commissioner Bhaskar Rao to invite the I Paid A Bribe team to present their findings to his staff.

"I wanted to use that website to cleanse my department," he said. "If I try to do things on my own here, I may run into rough weather... But the evidence on this website gives me some internal support to bring about reforms." "People in the office are realising that if they take money, it definitely is not something just between the giver and the taker. It is spreading out of this room, and now across the globe, on the web. "So everybody in the world gets to know that this office is not a good office and institutional pride is hurt." The website team helped Bhaskar Rao's department to identify the procedures most prone to corruption. Twenty senior officers have been cautioned, and technology is now being introduced to minimise the opportunities for bribe-taking. _53096897_automated-driving-test-cent.jpg The automated driving test centre did meet opposition at first from driving inspectors For example, driving licences can now be applied for online, making the status of each application transparent to everyone involved. Driving test bribery was a tougher problem. Bhaskar Rao turned to a local IT company to come up with a solution. The result: the world's first automated driving test centre opened in Bangalore this year. Drivers register for the test using a smart card and have to negotiate their way around a paved driving track fitted with electronic sensors. Their progress is recorded electronically. They also have to complete a screen-based test of their knowledge of the Highway Code. All opportunities for bribe-taking and bribe-giving have thus been removed. Not surprisingly perhaps, there was some initial opposition from driving inspectors to the introduction of this automated test centre. But it is now conducting up to 200 tests a day and has become a source of pride. And, they say, there are now a few better drivers on the Indian roads. Solving the problem of bribery in India is not going to happen overnight. But ipaidabribe.com shows that ordinary people can be turned from the victims of corruption into part of the solution.http://www.bbc.co.uk...h-asia-13616123

Edited by ed villas
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Mr Lee
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IMO it could work if a Filipino either abroad or in the Philippines, but connected would start such a website and honestly wish change to come about. Why don't you email your idea to the president of the Philippines, maybe he would start such a website to report bribes and corrupt officials on.

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Jake
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Hello Ed,Nice idea -- there are numerous "whistle-blowers" websites in the Philippines, notably under investigative journalism.Yeah right.....even if the complainant have solid evidences and placed under the government witness protection service,the general outcome of their cases are dropped, forgotten or their testimony was silenced because they are dead ormissing. Or their families are victimized as well to force them to keep their mouths shut.To balance out my comments, there have been some serious reprisal of active agents (Homeland Security, FBI, US military)who blew the whistle and got chit upon from their so called colleagues or the US government.Living in the Philippines, I would like to maintain a very low profile and assume the position of the three monkeys. Even thevery low level tsimis (gossiping) may bite me in the butt one day, if I speak out too loudly.Respectfully -- Jake

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Papa Carl
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Hello Ed,Nice idea -- there are numerous "whistle-blowers" websites in the Philippines, notably under investigative journalism.Yeah right.....even if the complainant have solid evidences and placed under the government witness protection service,the general outcome of their cases are dropped, forgotten or their testimony was silenced because they are dead ormissing. Or their families are victimized as well to force them to keep their mouths shut.To balance out my comments, there have been some serious reprisal of active agents (Homeland Security, FBI, US military)who blew the whistle and got chit upon from their so called colleagues or the US government.Living in the Philippines, I would like to maintain a very low profile and assume the position of the three monkeys. Even thevery low level tsimis (gossiping) may bite me in the butt one day, if I speak out too loudly.Respectfully -- Jake
Well Said Jake! Still it is a good idea, the problem is how to make it work? How to be anonymous, and most of all, who gets to read the complaints. They should be public, so all can see without a doubt.Great suggestion and post Ed VillasPapa Carl
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Jollygoodfellow
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If I remember correctly the Philippines government have a forum on their site to discuss all aspects of the Philippines for Filipinos so I think the people can talk to their government on that site.I would still think one one have to be carefully not to disclose who they are.

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