Friday, 23 May 2025

JUSTICE SYSTEM IN INDIA-PENDENCY OF CASES

 One of the main pillars of Democracy is the judiciary....unless the Judiciary functions effectively a Democracy does not deliver to its citizens.....

On this the Justice system in India is not functioning well....

Firstly the biggest blot of all is that 76% of the prisoners in our jails are  undertrials.....this compares very poorly with the USA where the undertrials percentage is only 22%....

That means a large percentage of people are in jails and tomorrow if they are proved innocent means their liberty is taken away for nothing and they have to bear the stigma of going to jail lifelong....

There are currently 1412 jails in India accounting for about 5.29 lac prisoners....of these there are 176 prisons with over 200% sanctioned occupancy....

On strength the UP jails take the number 1 position with 90,500 inmates. Bihar with 52,800, MP with 44,000, Maharashtra with 40,000, Punjab with 37,000, Haryana with 26,000, West Bengal with 24,000...

As you can see no Southern state is represented in those higher figures ...

In fact in performances across Police, Prisons, Judiciary and Legal aid all the Southern states are ranked at the top....and West Bengal is at the bottom.....

Out of a total of 10 following is how some of the states are ranked...

1. Karnataka.    6.78

2. AP.                 6.32

3. Telangana.     6.15

4. Kerala.          6.09

5. Tamilnadu.   5.62


States with least scores

1. West Bengal.  3.63

2. UP.                  3.92

3. Uttarakhand.   4.41

4. Jharkhand.      4.78

5. Rajasthan.      4.83

6. Bihar.             4.88

One of the things that is contributing to delayed justice is the shortage of Judges....I have made an analysis of the Supreme Court and High Court Judges on this ...and will come up later regarding the subordinate courts ...

In fact the backlog of appointments is the highest in the High Courts compared to other class of courts ...

The Supreme Court has a sanctioned strength of 34 Judges ...it currently has 33 Judges with just 1 vacancy....

The High Courts together have a sanctioned strength of 1114 Judges of which only 769 are functioning currently leaving a shortage of 345 Judges or 31%....

Actually the position in some of the High Courts is horrible and little wonder justice gets delayed ...

The worst is the Allahabad High Court which has a sanctioned strength of 160 Judges of which only 87 have been appointed leaving a shortage of 73 or a stunning 46%....when the courts are so understaffed it is very difficult to expect justice speedily....

2nd worst surprisingly is the home state of the PM which is industrially very well developed ...the Gujarat High Court has a sanctioned strength of 52 Judges while the functioning Judges are only 29, leaving a gap of 44%...

After them Calcutta and Bihar shortage 38%, Rajasthan, Punjab & Haryana, Odisha and Uttarakhand 36% each....

Pendency in courts rounded off....

Supreme Court.            9,06,000

High Courts.              63,18,000

Subordinate Courts 4,58,00,000

Total pendency        5,30,24,000

So there are a total of 5.30 crore cases pending in our courts ....

Wednesday, 14 May 2025

KING SANJAY-THE MARUTI FARCE.

 Sanjay Gandhi was a most horrible guy. He behaved more like a King than the. PMs son. Rules were broken for his sake left and right. Had the horrible man lived on he would have made India into an autocracy no doubt. In his life, the saga of Maruti makes the man completely revealed to you. See how casually he pushed aside the law and did whatever he wanted....

At the time of Emergency we were students and were more interested in other things than politics, so we never knew all these things. Now when we read this we shiver how the system was fully compromised by this spoilt brat.

In India, there was an idea in the 1950’s to produce low priced cars. It was first conceived by Manubhai Shah. 

Later, the Government itself took up the project but due to the strong opposition from TT Krishnamachari no decision was taken. 

The Mysore Industrial development Corporation estimated that it would cost Rs 5000 to 6000 to produce their prototype on a commercial scale. There were then 2 different schools of thought for this project. 

One said it should be manufactured in collaboration with foreign car manufacturers,   while the other said it should be manufactured with indigenous resources. 

When this debate was going on, Sanjay Gandhi arrived on the scene. 

He first joined Rolls Royce as a mechanic at Crewe in the UK, no doubt recommended by his mother. He dropped out of the training in between and arrived in India. 

For obvious reasons Sanjay got the license. Sanjay produced one prototype first in a backyard garage in Delhi. Immediately a letter of intent was issued to him. 

Finally despite the huge criticism of the prototype a license was issued to Maruthi Ltd. to produce 50,000 cars annually. Sanjay’s shareholding in the company amounted 1 share of Rs 100, yet he was the Managing Director. 

The 2 conditions stipulated in the letter of intent were 1. That the car should be produced entirely from local sources and  2. It should be low priced. Of course later Maruthi never fulfilled both these conditions. 

With the license in hand he went around acquiring land and finance. He was the son of the PM, so obviously neither was difficult to obtain. 

Willing businessmen funded his venture while Bansilal, the then CM of Haryana and a big chamcha of the family, Bansilal stepped in for the land. He took away 445 acres of fertile agricultural land on the Delhi Gurgaon highway evicting the inhabitants of 3 villages. 

They were paid Rs 10000 an acre while the market rate was Rs 35,000. The site also violated the rule that no factory should be built within 1000 mtrs of any defence installation, as it was located right next to an army ammunition dump.

Since the beginning, the project was a horrible failure. The first prototype was junked, the second turned turtle on its test run, and the subsequent ones developed snags ranging from faults with the steering, suspension and also overheating. 

Sanjay then abandoned the conditions of the LOI and resorted to use of imported equipment. Even after that Maruti failed to produce a roadworthy model, proving that Sanjay was a dunce who headed the Company only because he was the PM’s son.

The project slowed and staggered along. Sanjay said in Dec 1973 that a model would be ready in 6 months. He repeated the same thing in June 1974 and said that by 1977 the plant would run at optimum capacity and start producing 200 cars per day.  

By that time Maruti slowly sunk into deep debt. Then Sanjay turned to Public Financial Institutions. 

Due to his mother nationalised banks extended unsecured loans to Maruti with Central Bank of India & the Punjab National Bank each loaned him Rs 75 lacs. In 1976 that was a big amount.

Finally the RBI was compelled to intervene regarding further loans to the company which of course led to a clash of Sanjay Gandhi with the RBI. 

After the Emergency was imposed Sanjay shot into the forefront of politics and he directed his ire towards those officials who had dragged their feet in financing him. 

Dr Taneja, the Chairman of the Central Bank was sacked. Then Dr Hazari, the Dy Governor of RBI was also similarly replaced by a relatively junior officer from the Income tax Department.

The Governor of RBI S Jagannathan was retired and was succeeded by KR Puri, former Chairman of the LIC. 

8 months before Maruti was started Sanjay set up Maruti Technical Services Pvt. Ltd. (MTS) It had a paid up capital of Rs 2.15 lacs of which Sanjays share was Rs 1,15,000 and of the rest 1,00,000 was that of Rajiv and family. As per agreement MTS would receive 2% of the sales by Maruti, subject to a minimum of Rs 2,50,000 per annum. 

Another subsidiary of Maruti Ltd. was Maruti Heavy Works Ltd.(MHW) in which MTS held 59% of the shareholding and the Gandhi family another 9%. MTS is of course their technical consultant. 

These 2 companies were ill equipped and were staffed by ignoramuses. But Sanjay being what he was the companies were overwhelmed with orders. 

When the legality of these companies were questioned in the Parliament in 1975, and  Krishnaswamy, the Minister for Industrial development questioned the PEC and STC about the issue as Maruti acquired its equipment from these 2 companies, the Directors of both the PEC and STC were summoned by the PMs office and were reprimanded. Two officials entrusted with the investigation were suspended.

Krishnaswamy’s residence was raided where 2 bottles of liquor were found and he was suspended for violating the excise rules. 

A contract from ONGC was allotted to Maruti Heavy Vehicles contravening the regulations. 

When emergency arrived then Maruti undertakings went on to high gear. 

Suddenly the demand for road rollers supposedly heated up and BRO ordered for 100, Haryana state 50, Punjab for 40 and UP for an undetermined number with MHV. 

The price MHV charged was Rs 1,40,000 per roller which was then 40% higher than all other manufacturers in India. 

MHV did not have the equipment or the expertise to make road rollers. 

They sold the rollers fitted with 2nd hand engines of foreign manufacturers which they bought at Rs 2000 apiece.  

MHV also started building bus bodies. Again the state governments inundated them with orders despite them not having any experience in that line. 

The state governments fell head over heels to order the bodies at much higher rate. By the end of the Emergency they placed orders for over 1100 bus bodies. 

During and after the Emergency Maruti’s involvement with MNC’s bloomed. Maruti became th agents for International Harvester & Piper Co of the US, the Man Co & Demag co of West Germany and of course of Snam Progetti of Italy. 

Besides them, Maruti was also agents for supply of Chemicals, pumping engines, bulldozers and telephone cables. 

Sanjay Gandhi also forced the Delhi Water Supply to utilize a water purifier named Quick Floc Polymix instead of alum for treating water. 

When some Engineers of the Corporation expressed their reservations on the product they were suspended. That product was banned as being toxic in the US but that did not deter Sanjay Gandhi at all from pushing it. 

Maruti was getting between 20 to 25% commission on all products for all the above MNC’s, so it was a very lucrative empire built using the power of his mother and strong arm tactics. 

A contract between Indian Tube Company, a PSU and British Steel was revoked and British Steel had to appoint Maruti Heavy Vehicles  as its agent to get the contract back. 

The ONGC was compelled to place an order for 24 heavy trucks to be supplied by International Harvester and Mann of Germany. 

The Maruti tender was twice as high as its competitor yet it got it.

An expansion tender for the Trombay Phulpur plants was given to Snam Progetti for which Maruti got a commission of Rs 2.50 crores in foreign exchange. 

As an agent for Piper Aircraft Maruti secured orders for 19 Piper Planes. Each plane gave Maruti a commission of Rs 500,000. 

Sanjay created another Company, The Maruti Aviation Company. Sanjay wanted to set up an airline and made a bid to acquire the premises of Safdarjung Airport. 

He ordered the Indian Airlines to vacate all hangars and also to park their fleet of buses, station wagons and cars at DTC depot at Indrapratha Estate. 

He wanted to put up the workshops of Maruti Aviation at Safdarjung Airport. Luckily the end of Emergency put an end to this scheme. 

As Maruti was making good money out of commissions, the scheme of making a small car was totally abandoned. 

By now Maruti was floundering in debt despite its associates MTS and MHV making piles of money . It had accumulated a loss of Rs 2.3 crores (In 1975) which was almost equal to its paid up capital.

However, Maruti Heavy Vehicles and MTS made good profits which obviously was siphoned off by Sanjay.   

This guy went about like a bull in a China shop and nothing could stop him.....a failed mechanic catapulted on to the throne with absolute powers. I wonder what would have happened to India had he lived on.

Sunday, 4 May 2025

ANALYSIS ON GROWTH OF WORLD RELIGIONS.

 

I was doing an analysis of how world religions have moved from the year 1801 onwards and the figures clearly point to something....

In the year 1801 Christianity comprised 20% of the World population but by the year 2025 it has grown to 31% of the World population ....that represents an annual growth of 5% over the 225 years...

Islam has grown from only 9% of the world population in 1801 to a hefty 25% of the world population by the year 2025....representing a growth rate of 10% over the 225 years.....

Hinduism has grown from 11% of the world population in 1801 to 14% of the world population by the year 2025....representing a growth rate of 5% over the 225 years.....

Buddhism has gone down from 7% of the world population in the year 1801 to only 6% of the world population in 2025 ..representing a growth rate of 3% of the world population, so it has grown alright but it  could not keep pace with the world's overall population growth....

Islam is by far the fastest growing religion in the world today....and from the year 1900 to the year 2000, it has managed to increase about 4% to its population share in the world every 50 years....

12%       in.   1900

16%.      In    1950

21%.      In.   2000

25%.      In.   2025

The growth rate of Muslim population has further accelerated by growing 4% in the last 25 years alone while Christianity stagnated at 31%.....in fact Christianity went up to 36% of the world's population by 1950 but came down to 31% in the year 2000 and stagnated there even in 2025....while in the corresponding period Muslim population increased its share by 9%.....

Another pointer is that with the advancement of science, more and more people are losing faith in religion....

In the year 1801 only 310,000 people in the world reported themselves as non-religious.....this has grown astronomically to over 108 crore people comprising 13% of the world population reporting themselves as non religious in 2025.....that represents an annual growth rate of 1548% over the last 225 years.....however the share of world population of this group came down from 15% in the year 2000 to 13% now.....

Which are the most irreligious countries in the world? Following is a list of the top 22 countries along with percentage of non believers....as per Pew research....

 

1. Czech Republic. 76%

2. North Korea.       71%

3. Estonia.                60%

4. Japan                    57%

5. China.                  52%

6. South Korea.       46%

7. Latvia.                 44%

8. Netherlands.        42%

9. Uruguay.              41%

10. Newzealand.      37%

11. Mongolia.          36%

12. Vietnam.            30%

13. Belarus.              29%

14. Sweden.              27%

15. Luxembourg.      27%

16. Germany.            25%

17. Australia.            24%

18. Canada.              24%

19.  Cuba                  23% 

20. UK.                     21%

21. Hungary.            19%

22. Finland.              18%

 

As can be seen from the above that either they are from Communist and erstwhile communist countries or else the highly developed countries except for Urugway....the US has 16% non-believers.....and most surprisingly Russia too has the same number of non-believers.

Saturday, 3 May 2025

EXPERIENCES IN MY LIFE--RAM VILAS KATARE, FRIEND WITH A FEARLESS CHARACTER

 I joined the State Bank of India as a Probationary Officer in 1982. My stint at SBI Bhind branch always floods me back with memories and one of them is Katare my Chief Manager. His full name is Ram Vilas Katare.  Katare had a very unusual character and I am yet to see such an utterly bold man in my life. He is ready to defy anyone or anything if he wants to without a second thought about whoever they are.  He is from Morena, the neighbouring district of Bhind and a part of Chambal and therefore had the same fearless character of many of the people from Chambal valley.

When I joined Bhind branch in 1991 as Manager (Personal Banking Division) , Mr T.C.Jain was the Chief Manager, after about 2 years, probably in 1993 Katare came in as Chief Manager of the Branch. Now Katare was a Trainee Officer (promoted from clerical cadre but through merit by taking a special exam) of 1979 batch which makes him 3 years senior to me. I knew Katare earlier itself, as I took over the advances desk from him at the Deputy General Managers Secretariat at Gwalior Zonal Office. I was friendly with him and therefore could never call him Sir despite him becoming my Chief Manager.

The Chief Manager before Katare, T.C. Jain (he too was a Trainee Officer) was a horrible character and made a mess of the branch. Now, since I happened to be the Manager of the Division under him, I had to suffer the consequences.  After him came Katare and they are personalities in contrast. The first one, very inward and cunning, and Katare very outward and straight as an arrow.

Katare is a Brahmin and he did not touch non veg or liquor at all. He is a handsome guy. I was 38 years old in 1993 and Katare must be about 4-5 years older to me and no more. So that makes him  42-43 years old then.  

Katare is meticulous on dress. He always wore a coat and a tie and came to the branch on a car. In a shocking contrast on some days he used to come to the branch in Dhoti and Kurta riding a bicycle. The first time when I saw that I was just stunned, but then, with Katare you just get used to such stuff.

The word coat brings back one remembrance about him. One day when I came to the bank, I just went to say hello to him. And there he was sitting in a lovely navy blue coat with flashing gold buttons. The coat was very impressive and I said as much to Katare.

He said thanks and then he laughed and told me that  he has not bought it and Yadav (that guy had a Distillery at Bhind and had a working capital limit with us) and Katare went to inspect his stocks at Delhi and were just roaming around in Connaught Place.

Katare, then  saw a readymade garments store and went in to have a look. Yadav accompanied him.  As he was searching through the coats, he found this very impressive coat, liked it and mentioned that to Yadav. Yadav said “Buy it Sir” but Katare said that was too expensive for him, and Yadav said “Sir, I will pay and you can give me back the money anytime you want”. So Yadav bought that coat for him. He told me that cost Yadav Rs 2700 and that was 1994 which means it would be easily equal to some Rs 10,000 today.

As I said earlier if Katare did something he does not hide it as he is simply fearless about anyone or anything. He had the guts to tell me that a customer bought that coat for him and it is not bought with his own money. He is very open and never concealed anything.  

His temper is volatile and he does not care a damn as to who his adversary is. If he wants to give it, he would give it to anybody including the Chairman of SBI itself.

Then SBI Bhopal circle had about 500 branches and was headed by a Chief General Manager. It then had 4 Zonal Offices at Bhopal, Raipur, Jabalpur and Gwalior each headed by a Deputy General Manager. So each DGM had about 125 branches under him. In turn each DGM had 3-4 Regional Managers under him.

Bhind was classified as one of the 32 critical branches of the Circle and once an interaction of the DGM’s of the 4 Zones, Regional Managers and Critical Branch BM’s was held at Local Head Office, Bhopal by the Chief General Manager. Now, for the circle a CGM is like an uncrowned king at that time. Even the DGM’s talked in hushed tones before the CGM.

The interaction was going on and at one point the CGM started talking about Bhind branch. There was some fall in its performance parameters in the previous year and the CGM commented on it. To that the only reply a  Chief Manager of the branch could have given is that he would do his best to improve the position. But Katare is not a guy who does such things.

The guy who said that was the CGM and no less, but that did not matter to Katare at all.  He just got up in the seminar and flatly told the CGM that there is absolutely nothing wrong with that branch and such and such circumstances have brought down the performance. Then he invited the CGM to come to the branch and personally inspect the position. Then he went on speaking further.

Now his RM and DGM must have been terrified at the way Katare was going about it with the CGM and the DGM Gwalior Zonal Office told Katare, please sit down we can talk about it later. But Katare was unrelenting and finally the RM then somehow managed to make Katare sit down. That is how fearless Katare is, he just goes ahead and does or speaks what he wants and to him it does not matter to whom he is talking to. Even if that is the PM, Katare’s attitude would be the same. He is prepared to take the consequences of his actions.

One day the Regional Manager of the region which controlled Bhind branch was having a seminar on Statutory Audit at the time of annual closing in March. All the BM's under his region as well as the Managers of Divisions in the branches attended the seminar.

The seminar was held at a hotel in Gwalior. After the seminar was over the RM (Vithal Ganesh Rabade) who himself was a Trainee Officer and was the Guru of Katare was conducting the seminar.

After completion of Statutory Audit issues he started questioning about issues from individual branches. On the way he questioned Katare about something pending with the Bhind branch for submission to the Regional office.

Now we do not know what mood Katare was in. He just stood up and said,

“Sir you first tell me what happened to my TA Bill which was sent to your office for passing 15 days ago? “

Rabade was taken aback. Moreover in front of all the BM’s & Manager of Divisions in a Region  headed by him it was an insult. But Rabade was not a guy who got excited easily. So he kept his cool and said to Katare that he should answer Rabade first and then he is ready to answer to Katare’s question. But Katare did not agree, he said why Rabade cannot answer him first? Katare got so excited that he had to be taken out of the Seminar hall by the other BM’s before the seminar could continue. That day I did not attend the Seminar and this incident was narrated to me by Hemraj, Manager of the Agriculture Division who went with him.  

Next day when I went to the branch, Katare called me and showed me the letter which the Regional Office has sent him. The letter mentioned that on some issue Katare had to be physically taken out of the Seminar hall before the seminar could commence and sought his explanation. He told me “These bastards think they are very smart; What the hell do I care? I would resign from the Bank”. However, later that issue was settled and Katare remained in the Bank.  

He was not bothered about the office bearers of the Officers Association either. In the Bank the Officers association is powerful and the clerical one even more so. One day the AIBOC (All India Bank Officers Congress) which represents all the officers of SBI had given a call for a strike on some issue. Katare said nothing doing and said he would not go on strike and he wanted to work on the strike day.

In the SBI the Head Cashier was always an officer and held one of the keys of the strong room, while the accountant or another officer held the second key. Unless both the keys are operated on, the safe would not open. In SBI, under no circumstances can both the keys be handed over to the same person. In order for working on that day Katare took one key, and got the other key delivered to Hemraj, Manager (Agriculture Division)  after somehow coaxing  him not to go on strike. On the day of the strike when all the bank branches of SBI all over the country went on strike, Katare opened the branch and conducted some 50 transactions against the directive of the AIBOC. Such is Katare.

Later, in another incident took place. M.P.Jain is a dada and was the President of the Officers Association of the Gwalior Zonal Office. Now, Katare was earlier his Sishya. During one year’s Officers Association elections MP Jain came with his panel of 6 members to campaign at the branch. As is customary, he met Katare and sought his permission for campaigning in the branch. By then one Bhawnani has become the Manager of the Agriculture Division in place of Hemraj.

The panel met all the officers in the branch and finally went to Bhawnani’s cabin which is upstairs and were sitting with him. Bhawnani ordered cold drinks for them. MP Jain then committed a protocol blunder probably considering that Katare is still his Sishya. He sent a message to Katare through a branch messenger to come and have cold drinks with him.

Now Bhawnani did not go along well with Katare because their personalities were utterly different, Katare the plain and open guy while Bhawnani was a typical Sindhi who is cunning. That act of MP Jain was nothing short of an insult to Katare and he does not take such insults lying down. He asked the messenger to tell MP Jain that he would not come.  

My cabin was located directly at the back of Katare’s and on that day I heard loud voices in his cabin and I immediately rushed there to see what the matter was. I found that Katare lifted his hand and was about to beat MP Jain. Bhawnani in desperation was hanging on to him and stopped him with great difficulty from doing so. If his blow landed obviously MP Jains panel of 6 guys would not have kept quiet and we from the Branch would have to intervene and it would have been a total mess.

Here is another incident to show Katare’s carefree nature. SBI was conducting the CAIIB (Exam of the Indian Institute of Bankers) every year at Bhind, and for assistance in the Exam two lady lecturers from the Government College came for invigilation and Katare grew friendly with them.

Both the ladies are PhD’s, one in science and the other in English. One was Adarsh Mishra and the other Komal Kushwaha. The former was a Brahmin and the latter a Rajput. Both were married as well. If the relationship stopped as just friends there would not have been any problem but it grew much deeper and the two ladies (who were close friends to each other) used to come to the Branch and were sitting in his cabin for hour’s together chit chatting with him. This made the tongues of the staff wag in the branch but Katare just did not care and things went on like that. Later I was transferred from the branch but came to know that the ladies who were once close friends had a fight between them because of Katare and stopped talking to each other.

So, that is Katare for you, uncompromising on anything and goes his own way and defies everyone including the society. He is utterly fearless and backs down at nothing. But later after I was transferred, the most surprising development was that Katare opted for VRS from the Bank and set up his own industry at Gwalior, something related to Rubber and he exported its product. He succeeded in his venture very well and he has now settled down at Vadodara where he has set up another Branch. He had 2 daughters both of whom married Thakurs.

Now with his type of temperament how he succeeded in the industry I do not know, but he took VRS, did very well for himself and became a successful industrialist. I think that was an amazing transition. In the industry one has to make so many compromises with Government officials. It makes me wonder how he managed that.  With his flaring temperament that was never defensive, being a businessman is almost impossible. And Katare is a guy who never changes and plays by his own rules, so to me it appears like a miracle.