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The steady stream of Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) cases against revenue officials in Jammu and Kashmir points to a troubling reality: corruption is not episodic, it is systemic. Yet, the absence of consolidated, designation-wise data on officials booked or chargesheeted exposes an equally serious problem — a lack of transparency in measuring the scale of that corruption.
Patwaris, as frontline officials, appear most frequently in trap cases. This is not surprising. They are the first point of contact for land records, mutations and certifications — services that directly affect citizens’ lives. But focusing only on individual arrests risks missing the larger pattern. When similar cases repeat year after year, it suggests structural weaknesses rather than isolated misconduct.
Equally concerning is the limited visibility of higher-level accountability. Tehsildars and other supervisory officials appear less often in trap cases, but do surface in chargesheets involving larger or coordinated irregularities. Without aggregated data, it is impossible to assess whether enforcement is evenly distributed or selectively concentrated at lower levels.
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The core issue is not just corruption — it is the inability to quantify it. Without clear statistics, policymakers cannot evaluate trends, identify high-risk areas, or measure the impact of reforms. Public trust, too, suffers when enforcement appears active but opaque.
The solution lies in systemic reform. Digitization of land records, minimizing human interface, and mandatory timelines for services can reduce opportunities for bribery. But equally important is data transparency. Periodic public reports detailing department-wise and designation-wise corruption cases would mark a significant step toward accountability.
In governance, what is not counted is rarely controlled. Jammu and Kashmir’s revenue system cannot afford to operate in that blind spot any longer.