For a Free and Democratic Society

Every citizen must realise that whatever our job or occupation or responsibility, we are the trustees of our democratic order and we should never violate that trust

By Sada Reddi

The perception that a general malaise is gripping the country is not very far from reality. For the population, there is no longer a single doubt aboutthe urgent need to address various failings confronting the country. But the big question that remains is: how do we do it? No one has a readymade solution, but there is a vast amount of experience that should be tapped to forge a new direction for a free and democratic society.

The parliamentary system, albeit a restricted one, has been in place since the 1886 elections. Our citizens have assumed that parliamentary government and state institutions will keep on improving with time, but they seem to have suddenly discovered that it was wrong to assume its linear development would be maintained. They have now come face to face with the unsuspected hidden dangers that have burst out in the open and are trying to turn the clock back. They also realize that institutions also decay and perish unless they are revitalized and revived and given a new lease of life.

The statistical expression of the malaise can be easily found in the rising inflation, the depreciation of the rupee, growing indebtedness and balance of payments deficit, unemployment, and poor governance. The recent report of the Director of Audit shows the waste of public resources and public money collected in the form of taxes. The Extended Programme has been such a failure that the authorities are afraid to reveal that about only 2% of the 3000 or so candidates examined have probably attained the necessary level at the examination. Now has been added to the growing list of grievances the (mal)functioning of the parliamentary system and of most of our institutions,and therein may lie the many ills of society.

Political scientists would surely probe the issues affecting our country and reach a different conclusion but reflection and action by society have to start right away pending further action and measures to be taken at a later stage. It has been clear to many social scientists since a long time that our democratic system has been sliding towards a patrimonial system for the benefit of a new corrupt oligarchy,for very often underlying ethical principles have been violated with impunity.

Laws, procedures and conventions

Nevertheless, on balance, barring some weaknesses, the system has worked more or less satisfactorily for a long period of time and several conventions informing it were respected. Those principles and conventions were derived from a long tradition of parliamentary government inherited from the Westminster model. We may have forgotten that a parliamentary system is not merely a series of laws and procedures inscribed in our Constitution. Rather, it is also grounded in a number of conventions that have to be observed and respected if we want the system to operate usefully and efficiently and above all democratically.

It is true that in the past conventions have often been flouted and ‘To hell with Erskine May’ had been hurled at the President of the Legislative Council. This is not surprising for it took time to learn and get a good grasp of parliamentary skills; it seems today the learning curve will take a much longer time what with our present political culture or the lack of it. This is evident during most sessions of the National Assembly. Even worse, independent institutions are being disparaged and the principle of the separation of powers is being thrown to the winds while a section of the police force on which the public could rely for protection has fallen low in their eyes. Read More… Become a Subscriber

Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 14 April 2023

An Appeal

Dear Reader

65 years ago Mauritius Times was founded with a resolve to fight for justice and fairness and the advancement of the public good. It has never deviated from this principle no matter how daunting the challenges and how costly the price it has had to pay at different times of our history.

With print journalism struggling to keep afloat due to falling advertising revenues and the wide availability of free sources of information, it is crucially important for the Mauritius Times to survive and prosper. We can only continue doing it with the support of our readers.

The best way you can support our efforts is to take a subscription or by making a recurring donation through a Standing Order to our non-profit Foundation.


Thank you.

Football news:

<!DOCTYPE html>
Kane on Tuchel: A wonderful man, full of ideas. Thomas in person says what he thinks
Zarema about Kuziaev's 350,000 euros a year in Le Havre: Translate it into rubles - it's not that little. It is commendable that he left
Aleksandr Mostovoy on Wendel: Two months of walking around in the middle of nowhere and then coming back and dragging the team - that's top level
Sheffield United have bought Euro U21 champion Archer from Aston Villa for £18.5million
Alexander Medvedev on SKA: Without Gazprom, there would be no Zenit titles. There is a winning wave in the city. The next victory in the Gagarin Cup will be in the spring
Smolnikov ended his career at the age of 35. He became the Russian champion three times with Zenit

18:20 Mauritius Times Friday 20 October 2023
18:20 "‘Money politics’ a encore de beaux jours devant elle…
18:19 Invasion imminente de Gaza
18:11 Mauritius Times Friday 29 September 2023
18:11 "La situation restera floue tant que la date des élections ne sera pas fixée”
18:10 80 ans depuis la mort d’Anjalay Coopen : qu’en est-il de la lutte des classes à Maurice ?
16:40 Mauritius Times Friday 22 September 2023
16:40 "Wherever you go, up and down the country, you hear, and you feel, a very compelling cry for change…
16:40 Relations Inde et Canada : une amitié qui devient tendue
18:43 EAST CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN AFRICA HEALTH
18:41 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 1 September 2023
18:41 "La grande majorité des gens veut un changement
19:13 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 28 July 2023
19:13 "Ousting Jugnauth is necessary but not sufficient.
19:13 Point sur la situation politique
18:20 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 21 July 2023
18:20 "Stopping a third mandate for the ruling party is starkly and simply the imperative”
18:20 Narendra Modi, invité de marque de Macron pour les célébrations du 14 juillet
18:53 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 14 July 2023
18:49 "It is inconceivable that the Dayal case should have taken four years to be determined by both the Supreme Court and the Privy Council”
18:48 France : après les émeutes, les questions
18:36 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 30 June 2023
18:35 "The decision to deprive a person of his liberty and whether the person should be charged with an offence or not is not made by the police”
18:35 Paul Bérenger victime d’un malaise
19:51 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 23 June 2023
19:51 "Political vendetta can never be a substitute to the rule of law”
19:51 De ‘planting’ à ‘posting’ : la SST continue de faire parler d’elle
16:57 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 16 June 2023
16:57 "La pieuvre de la mafia ne pourra pas être éradiquée avec des paraboles et des paroles en l’air”
16:57 ‘Vimen Leaks’ et la course à l’audimat
15:20 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 9 June 2023
15:20 "This is not a pro-poor budget but a budget for the rich by the rich.
15:20 Budget 2023-24 – les prochaines élections générales ne sont pas pour bientôt…
13:37 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 2 June 2023
13:36 "Resorting to pension populism threatens the very survival of the welfare state”
16:51 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 26 May 2023
16:51 "Quand le pouvoir se montre intolérant et répressif, les électeurs se taisent et attendent le moment de se venger”
18:24 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 19 May 2023
18:24 Elections locales au Royaume-Uni : échec cuisant des Tories
17:04 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 12 May 2023
17:04 Paul Bérenger et Irfan Raman : Je t’aime, moi non plus
17:30 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 5 May 2023
17:30 1er mai – Discours et alliances…
15:01 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 21 April 2023
15:01 La réforme des retraites en France… Machiavel est passé par là
15:00 "The moral derailment in leadership needs to stop”
17:04 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 14 April 2023
17:04 For a Free and Democratic Society
17:04 ‘The Mauritian judiciary may not be as blameless as it appears to be’
18:37 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 7 April 2023
18:29 "Jugnauth est pris en tenaille de l’extérieur comme de l’intérieur”
18:25 Monkey Business at Grand Bassin
20:58 "Nos politiciens d’aujourd’hui ne sont pas les seuls coupables de la dérive de notre pays. Nous, électeurs mauriciens, sommes autant coupables”
16:15 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 31 March 2023
16:14 Free speech for the body politic?
14:55 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 24 March 2023
14:54 "The country is suffering from a full-blown crisis
14:54 Managing Law & Order and Maritime Security
17:07 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 17 March 2023
17:07 "Pravind Jugnauth does not feel threatened despite the mismanagement and scandals…
17:07 The Battle against Drug Trafficking and Mafia Infiltration
16:13 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 10 March 2023
16:12 "Le scénario de la rupture est posé depuis un moment…
16:12 For A New Social Contract
20:33 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 3 March 2023
20:27 "Which mafiosi? The Prime Minister should not be slow to name them”
20:23 Bruneau Laurette, the CP and the DPP
17:17 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 24 February 2023
17:17 "On installe des dynasties dans notre pays. C’est une honte qui nous affecte depuis des années”
17:17 "When we commit blunders, we look for culprits to bear the responsibility…
17:09 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 17 February 2023
17:09 « Jugnauth ira certainement au bout de son mandat
17:09 Trafic de drogue et financement des partis politiques
16:29 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 10 February 2023
16:29 Regroupement des forces militantes… Steven Obeegadoo à l’oeuvre
16:29 "The winds of change will blow stronger in the days and weeks to come”
16:48 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 3 February 2023
16:47 "No opposition anywhere deserves to win elections only on the back of popular discontent
16:47 Met, Rains and Drains!…
15:07 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 27 January 2023
15:07 Torrential Rains and Climate Change
15:07 "La descente va continuer, les dysfonctionnements vont perdurer…
14:58 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 20 January 2023
14:56 "Sauf circonstances exceptionnelles, il n’y aura pas d’élections générales anticipées”
16:05 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 13 January 2023
16:05 "The year 2023 should be a year of vigilance”
16:05 "The Mercy Commission is expected to carry out its functions with rigour, integrity, and honesty”
16:56 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 30 December 2022
16:56 "We cannot live with a system of growing endemic underlying corruption, punctuated by egregious cases of epic fraud and dishonesty”
17:19 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 23 December 2022
15:28 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 9 December 2022
15:28 "If Mauritius is not yet a police state, the Police Force’s brutal actions give a totally negative perception of the state of our democracy”
18:03 African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank)
17:41 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 2 December 2022
17:41 "The Abuse Needs To Stop”
16:21 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 25 November 2022
16:20 Suren Dayal’s Election Petition
14:45 Mauritius Times ePaper Friday 18 November 2022
14:44 "La possibilité d’un Labour Revival à la veille des élections est dans le domaine du possible”
14:44 Drug Trafficking & Criminal Defence Ethics