Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Citizen Initiative: Never Forget


Never Forget   has been in the works for 2 months, and it went live this Republic Day -- yesterday. While the 26/11 terrorist attack in Mumbai is the immediate trigger (look at the site's banner), it is only a hook; the site is meant for changing the very way we are governed, by getting the community -- us -- to monitor our politicians by holding them up to their own election promises.

... [I]f WE, the people, who elect them, do not care to evaluate their performance periodically, WHO will be the appraiser of enforcement of promises?

We maintain that, as a collective force, we can work to keep track of what our elected representatives -- whether at the centre, state, city, town, district or village level -- promised us and how far the promises have been fulfilled.

How is this going to be done? Here's the Vision statement:

At the heart of our effort is the idea of promises that can be evaluated. We want to find out whether our elected leaders are implementing what they promised to do in their common minimum program/manifestos , and that can be done by periodically monitoring the progress on each and every one of them. And this data can be used by the electorate to assess performance by way of our ballots.

The other core principle that we base our endeavor on is that of verifiable analysis. Each and every claim made in the course of our effort, without fail, will have to essentially be accompanied by a reference either documentation or factual press release. We believe that this will give our work the credibility that is seen lacking in several current editorials and articles about the state of the nation.

The people behind this initiative are young, tech-savvy, driven and committed. I met one of them -- Animesh Pathak, a fellow BHU alum (he blogs here), and I still remember his energy and enthusiasm while he was describing this project to me.

Go check out Never Forget. More importantly, if you believe in the concept, participate in it.

3 Comments:

  1. Anonymous said...

    Perhaps I would participate under option "Help with web design for the website".
    Well, isn't it interesting to note the "iconic" header of the website, depicting Taj?

  2. Animesh said...

    @abi: Thanks a lot for the mention, and the kind words [and for coffee and snacks that day :-)]. We have been getting a steady stream of sign-ups of volunteers from all over India and abroad. Good to see that people are interested in action :-).

    @Subrahmanya: Thanks a lot for your enthusiasm, and your email to us. We will get back to you soon.

    bests,
    Animesh
    Never Forget

  3. Arvind said...

    It's great to see initiatives like this while things like this happen too!