In this Urdu/Hindi conversation with Israr Kasana on JNN, I discuss corruption in India and why it cannot be understood merely as a legal or administrative problem.
Corruption in India is rooted in deeper social and moral failures: lack of trust, weak civic morality, absence of shame, poor institutions, and a culture in which rules are often treated as obstacles rather than principles. The result is not merely bribery, but a wider disorder in public and private life.
Watch the full discussion below:
Key Takeaways
- Why corruption in India is far deeper than bribery or bad governance
- How weak civic morality makes institutions hollow and ineffective
- Why rules fail when people do not internalize honesty, restraint, and responsibility
- How corruption damages trust, competence, and everyday social life
- Why India’s problems must be understood culturally and morally, not merely politically
