Police ordered the release of Anna 
Hazare, the country's leading anti-corruption campaigner, from jail on 
Tuesday after mounting nationwide protests against his arrest for 
planning a hunger strike forced a U-turn by beleaguered Prime Minister 
Manmohan Singh.
Source: Reuters
    The arrest of 74-year-old 
Hazare early on Tuesday sparked outrage from opposition parties and 
spontaneous protests, from candle-light vigils to the burning of 
effigies of government figures, in cities across India.
    Dressed in his trademark white 
shirt, white cap and spectacles in the style of independence leader 
Mahatma Gandhi, Hazare has won support from many Indians sick of endemic
 corruption in Asia's third largest economy.
    A close aide who had also been 
arrested told reporters Hazare was refusing to leave the jail until he 
obtained government permission to continue his fast in a park in the 
capital.
    Police also released about 1,500 of Hazare's followers detained in Delhi for defying the police order not to protest.
    The turnaround could be a huge 
blow for Singh, already criticised as a weak and out-of-touch leader for
 the way his ruling Congress party grappled with a string of corruption 
scandals and high food inflation.
    The decision to release Hazare may also signal a division within the government over how to deal with the popular activist.
    STORMING THE BARRICADES
    In the capital, supporters 
angry at Hazare's detention earlier stormed police barricades, while 
thousands more gathered in front of the jail, parliament and India Gate.
    "A man has the right to fast. 
Gandhi fasted despite everyone telling him not to... Not even the 
British (colonial) government prevented him," leading Indian lawyer and 
politician Ram Jethmalani told CNN IBN television.
(For live blog click http://blogs.reuters.com/india/2011/08/16/live-blog-anna-hazare-detained/ )
    "If the government stops 
protests or not, what it can't stop is the anger, which ultimately means
 bad news for Congress when people go to the polls," said M.J. Akbar, an
 editor at influential news magazine India Today.
    "People expect Singh to be strong on corruption, not to be strong on those who protest against corruption."
    Initially, Hazare was ordered 
held for one week and taken to Tihar jail, joining several government 
officials, including the former telecoms minister, who are under arrest 
over a multi-billion dollar telecoms graft scandal.
    "The second freedom struggle 
has started ... This is a fight for change," Hazare said in a 
pre-recorded message broadcast on YouTube. "The protests should not 
stop. The time has come for no jail in the country to have a free 
space."
    The arrests shocked many in a 
country with strong memories of Gandhi's independence battles against 
colonial rule with fasts and non-violent protests.
   The question for many is whether
 Hazare's movement will grow in the fast-urbanising nation of 1.2 
billion people whose increasingly assertive middle class is fed up with 
constant bribes, poor services and unaccountable leaders.
    An anti-graft protester was 
found dead in a blood-soaked car in Bhopal, where hundreds had taken to 
the streets. A senior police officer told Reuters it was not clear 
whether the death was linked to the protests.
    Home Minister Palaniappa 
Chidambaram said Hazare and several other leaders had been placed under 
"preventative arrest" to ensure they did not carry out a threat to 
protest.
    "Protest is welcome, but it must be carried out under reasonable conditions," Chidambaram told a news conference.
    "A MURDER OF DEMOCRACY"
    Both houses of parliament were 
adjourned for the day after the opposition protested at the arrests of 
Hazare and his key aides, further undermining the chances that reform 
bills -- seen as crucial for Asia's third-largest economy -- will be 
passed.
    "This is murder of democracy by
 the government within the House and outside the House," said Arun 
Jaitley, a senior leader of the opposition Hindu nationalist Bharatiya 
Janata Party.
    The scandals, including a 
telecoms bribery scam that may have cost the government $39 billion, 
have smothered Singh's reform agenda, dented investor confidence and 
distracted parliament just as the $1.6 trillion economy is being hit by 
inflation and higher interest rates.
    Those arrested included Kiran 
Bedi, one of India's first female police officers and a widely respected
 figure for her anti-graft drive. She was later released.
    Police denied Hazare permission
 on Monday to fast in a park near a cricket stadium because he had 
refused to end his fast in three days and ensure no more than 5,000 
people took part.
    Opposition figures likened the 
crackdown to the 1975 "Emergency" when then-prime minister Indira Gandhi
 arrested thousands of opposition members to stay in power.
    A HARDENING STANCE
    Singh and Congress had hardened their stance against Hazare in recent days, fearing that these protests could spiral.
    The prime minister used his 
Independence Day speech on Monday to criticise Hazare, and Congress 
spokesman Manish Tewari said Hazare was surrounded by "armchair 
fascists, overground Maoists, closet anarchists".
    Hazare rose to fame for lifting
 his village in western state of Maharashtra out of grinding poverty. 
His social activism has forced out senior government officials and 
helped create a right to information act for citizens.
    Hazare became the unlikely 
thorn in the side of the Congress-led coalition when he first went on a 
hunger strike in April and won concessions from the government.
    Tapping into a groundswell of 
discontent over corruption scandals in Singh's government, Hazare 
lobbied for a parliamentary bill creating a special ombudsman to bring 
crooked politicians, bureaucrats and judges to book.
Hazare called off that fast after the government promised to 
introduce the bill into parliament. The legislation was presented in 
early August, but activists slammed the draft version as toothless, 
prompting Hazare to renew his campaign.Source: Reuters

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