Oia
April 2007, Oia.
April 2007, Oia.
May 2007, Cologne.
Spring finally came to my garden so I went exploring with my oft neglected macro lens. This is one of the things I found. Not perfect I know.
May 2007, Athens.
This is part of the (very theatrical) changing of guard ceremony of the Evzones (the elite Presidential Guard) at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier which lies in front of the Greek Parliament.
April 2007, Somewhere over the Aegean Sea, Greece.
(Press F11 to view this better.)
April 2007, Oia.
Oia is a beautiful little village perched on the Western edge of an ancient caldera on the island of Santorini in the Aegean Sea to the south of Greece, famous for its incredible sunsets. Although the sunset, the day we were there, was not that incredible I did fall in love with Oia’s narrow lanes and spotless white washed houses.
The travesty of a Member of Parliament, Babubhai Katara, being arrested for people-trafficking is a sore reminder of the depravation that has permeated our lawmakers. That Babubhai was naive enough to believe that he could lead a lady in ghunghat masquerading as his wife through immigration in India and Canada, shows the level of (or lack of) intelligence that has become a hallmark of his peers.
What is worse is the decision of the Parliament’s Ethics committee to not take action against him as “charges against him were unrelated to his work in Parliament”.
It is appalling that 135 members of parliament have criminal cases pending against them.
In India, we have a tradition of declaration of assets etc. by candidates when they file their nomination for election. What is missing is a similar declaration once they have been elected. What we need is an annual declaration by all elected members of parliament, of their assets as well as the police record against them. Let the public then judge them.
The problem is such a practice can only be made mandatory by a law. But will the lawmaker be ready to make such a law?
One alternative could be that of an independent agency/NGO taking up this work and of publishing it at the year-end in the newspapers. The Right to Information Act can be very useful for this activity.
The people of India cannot afford to dismiss such crime with cynicism. It is our duty to act.