the railways
The gravy train
The Railways, with an annual loss of a staggering Rs 27,000 crore, is riddled with corruption. Unless concerted efforts are made to put it back on track and come down hard on those out to milk it dry, there may soon be no option but to privatise the bleeding behemoth, as many countries around the world have already done.
By Girja Shankar Kaura
The gravy train
The Railways, with an annual loss of a staggering Rs 27,000 crore, is riddled with corruption. Unless concerted efforts are made to put it back on track and come down hard on those out to milk it dry, there may soon be no option but to privatise the bleeding behemoth, as many countries around the world have already done.
By Girja Shankar Kaura
The
embarrassment over Railway Minister Pawan Kumar Bansal
resigning amidst charges of his relatives having received bribe for
‘managing’ a top posting may be very uncomfortable for the
government, but the existence of corruption in the largest public
sector organisation is a phenomenon well established by a series of
massive exposés over the years.
Recently, the Chinese
government dismantled its railway ministry with the aim of improving
efficiency and rooting out corruption. That raises the inevitable
question: would such a move help the Indian Railways fight corruption
too?
Corruption had been a
major issue in China, with a senior functionary connected to the
bullet train network being removed from office two years ago on
charges of bribery. Another official of the Chinese railways was said
to have bought a house in Los Angeles for $8,60,000, though his
monthly salary was a few hundred dollars.
As in India, the
Chinese railways was a mammoth organisation with 2.1 million people
employed for its 80,000-km track. The Indian Railways employs 1.4
million people for its 63,300-km track. Even as its finances are in
dire need of revival — the gross traffic receipts fell short of the
target of Rs 1,32,552 crore by Rs 6,872 crore — there is no dearth
of money to be made on the sly, to which the focus has now shifted
following the crores-for-plum-post case.
Jobs
on sale, safety pays the price
The history of corruption in the Railways hit the nadir when Pawan Bansal had to be forced to resign as Railway Minister following the arrest of his nephew on charges of accepting bribe for fixing an appointment in the Railway Board. |
What makes the latest
bribery scam involving Bansal’s nephew Vijay Singla, another
relative Sandeep Goyal, top railway official Mahesh Kumar and three
others dangerous is the fact that it pertains to the safety of
passengers.
Kumar wanted to
control signalling tenders worth Rs 50,000 crore, for which he
allegedly paid Singla an initial bribe of Rs 90 lakh. In his recent
Budget speech, Bansal had spoken of the continued thrust on improved
signalling for ensuring better safety for train operations. But two
months down the line, his ministry stands exposed for endangering the
safety of 18 million passengers who travel by train every day.
The Rs 10-crore
allegedly sought to be paid to fix the posting of a Railway Board
Member clearly reflects that there is much more to be made while in
that office.
For the record, amid
allegations that Kumar had offered bribe to get the posting of Member
(Electrical), the Railway Ministry came out with a statement saying no
"relevant" board-level job was vacant and denied any
wrongdoing in Kumar’s present appointment as Member (Staff).
The ministry said
Kumar was the senior-most eligible officer fulfilling the
tenure-linked norms. It said his career performance record fully met
the necessary performance criteria for the post. "He was
accordingly considered and appointed as Member (Staff), Railway Board,
on May 1, 2013. No officer senior to Mahesh Kumar fulfilling the norms
governing appointment to the post of Member (Staff) has been
superseded," it said.
The ministry
explained that as per tenure-linked norms, an officer was eligible for
appointment as Member of the Railway Board if he fulfilled the twin
conditions of having worked as General Manager of an open-line railway
for a year and had a balance of two years of service on the date of
occurrence of the vacancy.
For
votes, they won’t raise fares
The railways
operating ratio, or working expenses as a ratio of traffic receipts,
deteriorated from 75.9 per cent in 2007-08 (when Lalu Prasad was the
Railway Minister) to 94.7 per cent in 2009-10 (when Mamata Banerjee
was the minister) before improving to 88.8 per cent in 2012-13. But
there is little that the minister or officials at Rail Bhavan have
done over the years to improve the health of the Railways.
A mere 13,000-km of
rail line has been added in the 66 years since Independence while
ministers over the years have used the organisation as a political
tool to keep their constituency happy.
The penchant of every
Railway Minister to announce a slew of new trains has put so much
pressure on the organisation that it is bursting at its seams with no
solution in sight. The perception is that those concerned — whether
serving boys on trains, ticket checkers or members of the Railway
Board — are only interested in making money, rather than improving
the health of the Railways, which pays Rs 20,000 crore in pensions.
This amount is more than 60 per cent of its passenger earnings of Rs
32,500 crore for 2012-13.
Ministers are
reluctant to raise passenger fares. Instead, they keep increasing
freight rates to fill the coffers.
As a result,
passenger fares in India are among the lowest in the world, and the
freight rates are among the highest, leading to people transporting
their goods by road rather than rail. Roads account for 57 per cent of
the freight traffic in the country, much higher than the US (44 per
cent) and China (22 per cent).
India, according to a
World Bank report, has much more passenger service than freight, which
constrains productivity, raises cost and invites political
interference in operations and pricing.
Reaching
new heights, only in corruption
The Central Vigilance
Commission (CVC) also sees the Railways as the most corrupt government
organisation in the country. In its 2011 annual report, the CVC stated
that the Railways topped the list of government organisations, with
the maximum number of complaints of corruption lodged. Of course, that
will also have to do with it being the largest employer.
In that year alone,
the CVC received over 8,800 complaints of graft against railway
employees — 500 more than the 8,330 in 2010. The 2010 figure had
registered an 80 per cent increase over the preceding year.
The 2010 CVC report
reveals that every third official penalised for corruption in the
country belonged to the Railways. Out of the 2,982 officials who faced
action in 2010, as many as 911 were from the Railways. In fact, the
corruption index in the Railways has doubled since 2009, when 509
officials had faced the heat for corruption following the
recommendation of the CVC.
The CBI has also
exposed numerous cases of corruption by railway staff, the one
involving Bansal’s nephew only being the latest. Among the cases
that came to light were that of AK Bora, then Chairman of the Railway
Recruitment Board, Northeast Frontier Railway, Guwahati (recruitment
scam); and Vinayak Ramchandra Shewale, then station master of Byculla
in Mumbai (was sentenced to two-year rigorous imprisonment and fined
Rs 4,000 for demanding Rs 2,100 from a person to sell juice) at
Byculla station.
In December 2012,
Arvind Vijeta Mittal, then senior divisional engineer, Central
Railway, was sentenced to three-year rigorous imprisonment and fined
Rs 75,000 for amassing assets disproportionate to his known sources of
income.
In October 2012, the
CBI arrested a sub-inspector of the Railway Protection Force at Satna
in Madhya Pradesh for accepting a bribe of Rs 2 lakh from a scrap
vendor. He had allegedly demanded a bribe of Rs 10 lakh from the
complainant for not implicating him in a theft case.
In August 2012, the
CBI arrested a senior divisional engineer of South Western Railway at
Hubli in Karnataka for accepting Rs 1.10 lakh from a contractor for
passing a bill. The list has many more names.
Curtains
to dispensers, there’s money in all
Officials say crores
of rupees are gifted to vendors by the Railways, which lets them
charge exorbitant rates for curtains and hundreds of other items that
it buys every year — all this for the kickbacks they receive.
Atul Kumar, a railway
store service official, had written to the then Railway Minister,
Mamata Banerjee, detailing the modus operandi for the leakage of
around Rs 5,000 crore each year. But his letter was not acknowledged.
"The Railways
buys stuff from pre-approved vendors. After getting approved, the
vendors take advantage and form cartels and quote exorbitant prices.
They dictate prices and this is known to all. But due to the large
kickbacks involved, or perhaps bureaucratic apathy, nothing fruitful
is done," Atul Kumar had said in his letter.
What is even more
disconcerting about the cartels is that the Railways itself first
breeds the cartels, and then the cartels bleed the organisation.
Atul Kumar had came
out with startling ‘facts’. In the case of fragrance dispensers
installed in AC 2-tier coaches and toilets in 2005, the Railways
Research Design and Standards Organisation (RDSO) told the management
to install a specific brand of odour-control system in trains. The
brands were ‘Auto Janitor’ and ‘Microburst’ produced by a
UK-based company and supplied by only three suppliers from Mumbai.
One of the companies
imported the dispensers for Rs 415 each and sold them to the Railways
for Rs 4,600 a piece. The dispenser refills were imported for Rs 226
and sold to the Railways for Rs 1,300 each.
Moreover, the
Railways cut out competition by making specifications match a
particular brand, leading to high pricing when similar locally made
dispensers were available for about Rs 700 each.
Also in the case of
side-bearer pads, which cost Rs 300 each in 2007, specifications were
changed to benefit vested interests. By the end of 2008, they were
sold to the Railways at Rs 4,160 each — 14 times the original cost.
Officials say every
year the Railways buys goods worth around Rs 20,000 crore. The
overpricing is by about 30 per cent, which goes from the exchequer
into the pocket of the officials. Money can be made in all departments
in the Railways. In 2004, a CAG report said the Railway Board
undertook no independent cost analysis when a new product replaced an
old one. Select firms approved to supply the new product ganged up,
started quoting exorbitant prices, and made a killing.
Sources say not only
do suppliers fix prices among themselves, but also find ways to fix
the introduction of new modifications in collusion with the Railway
Board and RDSO officials.
World
experiments with privatisation
Analysts say like
most PSUs, the Railways, too, has become a liability for the
government. Its annual loss is a whopping Rs 27,000 crore. By
privatising the Railways, India can turn the world’s third-largest
rail network into a profitable entity, they claim. Japan, the US, UK
and Argentina have shown the way, and China is the latest. Before
privatisation, Argentina was losing more than $1 billion a year.
China’s state
railways administration, to be supervised by the ministry of
transport, will take up the existing administrative functions of the
railway ministry, while a private entity, China Railway Corporation,
will carry out the commercial functions of the railway ministry.
Experts say India can
also draw up a model that works best for the Railways and implement
reforms by seeking international expertise.
Though privatisation may lead to
increase in travel costs, the money collected from the higher
passenger classes can be used to subsidise travel in the general
compartments. The government cannot wait any longer to improve the
health of the terminally-ill behemoth. And this scam has given it the
chance to start the clean-up process.
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