ISSN (Print) - 0012-9976 | ISSN (Online) - 2349-8846

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Tamil Nadu : Shaping Things to Come?

With the AIADMK's victory in the Sathankulam by-election, Jayalalithaa can once again reveal - and revel in - her enduring supremacy. All the same she is not one to let grass grow under her feet and is focused on next year's parliamentary poll. But it is hardly possible for her to ruminate over the national scene now, with her plate filled with regional - rather, local - problems. There is the running battle with the DMK and the acrimonious exchanges inside the assembly, with the debate turning to past events. Outside the house too, the fury of allegations and counter-allegations continues. Events have turned strongly dramatic with the Queen Mary's College affair.

Elections : Keeping Criminals Out

 n a milieu in which it is almost second nature for the powerful to regard themselves as above the law, the firm handling of the issue of AIADMK leader Jayalalitha’s eligibility to contest next month’s election to the Tamil Nadu assembly is a matter for profound satisfaction. After it was reaffirmed on behalf of the Election Commission that the question of a candidate’s eligibility was to be determined strictly according to the commission’s 1997 instructions which specifically barred persons convicted by a court of law and sentenced to imprisonment for two years or more from contesting elections, Jayalalitha’s disqualification by the returning officers of the constituencies from where she had filed her nomination should have been a foregone conclusion. For in its 1997 order the Election Commission had specifically addressed the issue of the eligibility of those, like Jayalalitha, who had been convicted and sentenced but whose sentence had been stayed to enable them to appeal to a higher court against their conviction and decided that such persons would stand disqualified. This was necessary, in the commission’s view, to deal with the “serious problem of criminalisation of politics in which criminals, i e, persons convicted by courts of law for certain offences, are entering into fray and contesting as candidates”.

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