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7 steps taken to implement new anti-corruption policy

  • The details of immovable assets of group A officers started to be put in public domain as per orders of the Government on April 11, 2011
  • It was decided by the then UPA government to set up 71 additional special courts for CBI cases
7 steps taken to implement new anti corruption policy

The anti-graft policy also called ‘inter alia’ include the Right to Information Act, inclusion of integrity pact in major purchases, ratification of United Nations Convention against corruption, placing of assets of government officers in public domain, setting up of additional special CBI courts, introduction of e-governance and direct benefit scheme.

 

#The Right to Information (RTI) Act was enacted in 2005 which allowed people to get information on the payment of Rs 10 without giving any reason

 

#The Central Vigilance Commission had recommended the organisations to adopt integrity pact in major procurement activities in 2007

 

#The United Nations Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC) was ratified in 2011

 

#The details of immovable assets of group A officers started to be put in public domain as per orders of the Government on April 11, 2011.

 

#It was decided by the then UPA government to set up 71 additional special courts for CBI cases in the country of which, 54 became functional between 2009 and 2011

 

# The e-governance and simplification of procedure and systems were initiated through the National e-Governance Action Plan (NeGP) sanctioned in 2006. The programme is now subsumed under Digital India.

 

#The Direct Benefit Transfer initiative was started on January 1, 2013.

 

All these steps were initiated by the erstwhile UPA government, during its two terms between 2004 and 2014, led by the then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. During the 2014 general elections, Congress was blamed by the BJP for corruption and going soft on corrupt elements

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