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India corruption bill vote adjourned amid chaos | |
(about 14 hours later) | |
India's upper house of parliament has adjourned amid chaos without a vote on the country's controversial anti-corruption Lokpal bill. | |
The heated debate had stretched to midnight local time (18:30 GMT), with hundreds of amendments put forward. | |
At one point, one MP snatched the bill from a minister and tore it up. | |
The Lokpal bill, which empowers an independent ombudsman to prosecute politicians and civil servants, passed the lower house on Tuesday. | |
The main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) immediately called on Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to resign, saying his government had shown it was not fit to rule. | |
The government said it had respected the constitution with the adjournment at midnight and that the people of India would know who was responsible for the failure to reach a vote. | |
The bill will now have to be revised and presented again. | |
'Useless' | |
The Congress-led government had been hoping the upper house would take the final step and make the bill law. | |
But media reports had said there was uncertainty about whether the governing coalition would be able to muster enough votes in the 243-member house. | |
The ruling alliance has 94 members there and needed a simple majority of 122 MPs to ensure the passage of the bill. | |
Finance minister Pranab Mukherjee had worked hard to shore up support among coalition members but faced opposition on key provisions, particularly on the state-level organisation of anti-corruption ombudsmen. | |
At one point, Rashtriya Janata Dal party member Rajniti Prasad tore up a copy of the Lokpal bill after snatching it from minister of state for parliamentary affairs V Narayanasamy. | |
Mr Singh had said before the debate: "I hope the bill will be passed by the upper house. I sincerely hope that all those who may have divergent views with regard to the Lokpal bill would respect the verdict of our parliament." | |
The debate has not only been heated in parliament. | |
Leading anti-corruption campaigner Anna Hazare has called the bill "useless". | |
He had started another hunger strike but has since called it off and threatened instead to launch a campaign of civil disobedience that would fill the country's jails. | |
Mr Hazare and his supporters say that tougher measures are required in the bill if it is to prove effective at reducing the level of corruption. | |
Mr Hazare's main complaint is that the bill proposes keeping India's top investigation agency, CBI, out of the purview of the ombudsman. | Mr Hazare's main complaint is that the bill proposes keeping India's top investigation agency, CBI, out of the purview of the ombudsman. |
In other words, the nine-member Lokpal committee - which would include the ombudsman - would not have its own investigative agency, a major demand of anti-corruption activists like Mr Hazare and many opposition parties. | |
A recent survey said corruption in India had cost billions of dollars and threatened to derail growth. | A recent survey said corruption in India had cost billions of dollars and threatened to derail growth. |