With the advancement of political awakening in the country, the individuals in command of authority have grossly misused their powers. They have enjoyed freedom of action for misdeeds largely because of ineffective accountability. A number of them do not seem to be amenable to any discipline. The maxim that power corrupteth a man and absolute power corrupteth absolutely has often been mentioned to describe this situation.
Not only have individuals, with the exceptions of a few misused power for their own personal ends, but political parties and groups have also exercised in this country during the past and political power incomplete disregard of all norms of equity and in violations of rules with impunity with the result that larger sections of the people have suffered and remained materially and otherwise more or less at the stage where they were at the beginning of the history of this country. Corruption has shattered our moral values and imbalanced all equilibriums of the economy and the society.
The process of accountability and anti-corruption initiatives have miserably failed to weed out corruption from the country. All we have seen during the last four decades is the retirement of some officers whose record was not unblemished after they had put in twenty-five years of service. The recent accountability and anti-corruption attempts by the incumbent PTI government also badly failed consequent to the resignation of Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Accountability under whom the Asset Recovery Unit was operating. Moreover, references prepared by the National Accountability Bureau (NAB), also could not sustain the legal tests in the courts of law, thus raising many eyebrows.
The entire emphasis of the government has been to prosecute the two major political families only, with no recoveries up to now, despite the fact that there are hundreds of cases reported under the Panama and Pandora Leaks apart from other mega corruption cases in the country. The Prime Minister’s Inspection Commission (PMIC) was assigned to investigate the bureaucrats whose names appeared in the leaks, the outcome is awaited, however, not much can be expected as PMIC is neither technically equipped nor has the requisite expertise to investigate such white-collar crimes.
It is surprising to note that neither NAB nor any other organization has been able to estimate the annual cost of corruption and its implications to the nation. The then chairman NAB in 2012 once in an informal statement stated that the daily corruption in the country ranged between Rs. 8 billion to Rs. 10 billion, the basis of these estimates was not revealed. The Transparency International usually makes some reference on this account but even that is not all encompassing.