Bengal chief
secretary transfer bares sour grapes of wrath
Jawhar
Sircar
(The
Telegraph, 30 May 2021)
As one who has served the state
government for half the “senior, secretariat years” while the other half of
this period was at the Centre, one could be a little distant from parochial
quarrels. Incidentally, governments were almost always in confrontational mode
and one is quite used to the issues and tensions involved.
Mercifully, the PM and most of
the ministers that one served were better educated and more cultured and the
debate between the two levels of the federation did not hit the rock bottom
that it does now. It is obvious that such limitations of genteel conduct do not
hold back the present clique and its current depredations are met by a
street-fighter who can retort measure for measure.
This explains, to some degree,
the present no-holds-barred war between the two, which is quite unprecedented
even to those who have seen battles before and had, willy-nilly, to be involved
with one side — depending on where one was posted at what time.
A bit of tension between the two
layers of federal governance is, however, not too unhealthy for establishing
working procedures in such a constitutional arrangement. It also permits the
release of steam on both sides that often represent and articulate contesting
interests of separate audiences. Occasional blow-ups actually help absorb the
heat of the conflict and may assist in finding new ways out.
It is, however, ironical that
Narendra Modi (chief minister from 2001 to 2014), who was the greatest votary
of the autonomy of states in a federal set-up, is the one who has now taken
upon himself the task of destroying India’s federal structure with the
intolerance of an Aurangzeb.
But it is his special venom
towards Mamata Banerjee and Bengal that is worrisome, not because he would
succeed in wreaking much havoc on either, but because of the ill-effects it has
on his own health. Like blackmail, sulking and vengeance have little place in a
democratic federal structure.
If the PM was so insistent, he
could have easily requested the CM in advance to accompany him on his aerial
survey of the cyclone-devastated areas yesterday. Instead, he seethed within
when the
CM moved on her pre-announced
tour of the affected areas. Such pent-up rage is not conducive to his health or
that of the nation that is entrusted to him.
Issuing a summons to the chief
secretary (CS) to be present in Delhi on the last date of his service does not
behove of a Prime Minister. The poor CS certainly does not dictate what his CM
should do or not do. In fact, if the PM felt, he could also have requested the
CM to depute her CS to attend his meeting, instead of victimising him later.
The “order” of May 28, 2021, sent
by the Centre is full of inconsistencies unbefitting the Appointments Committee
of the Cabinet of a once-mighty republic that is on its knees begging the world
for succour to control a pandemic that it failed to do.
First of all, it cannot issue a
unilateral order on an IAS officer who is not under its control, but under
another government within the federation. These issues have been settled time
and again, and its obverse is that the state government cannot issue an order
on an IAS or IPS officer of its own cadre who happens to be posted under the
central government while he has tenure left with the Centre, without the
Centre’s approval.
The second striking feature is
that it is really not a posting order because it does not mention to which post
the CS of this state has been posted. It is more of an intimation rather than a
formal order and it requests the state government to release him. What is
utterly humiliating is that a senior Union secretary-ranking officer is told to
report to a central ministry, much like sub-inspectors of police are ordered.
The short point is that the
central government cannot force an IAS or IPS officer to join a central posting
in Delhi against his will, without either his written ‘option’ or his
cadre-controlling authority, the state government, giving him prior clearance
to ‘opt’ for the Centre.
Managing All India Service
officers entails a complex balancing act and the founding fathers of our
Constitution wanted it to be so. They have held the federation together through
the worst of times like the long, bloody separative movements in Punjab, Assam
and several other parts of India — when local people were determined to break
away and state governments were taking sides.
Rule 6 (1) of the IAS Cadre Rules
of 1954 has been quoted but the rule reads: “A cadre officer may, with the
concurrence of the state governments concerned, and the central government, be
deputed for service under the central government….” This “concurrence” is most
critical.
The procedures enjoin that the
Centre has to inform the state government of its intention to take
deputationists from the state and officers have to give their ‘options’, which
then has to be cleared by the state. Many of us have not been ‘cleared’ and
were stuck with the state, but that is how it is. Incidentally, the national
record for not permitting state IAS and IPS officers to go on central postings
is held by none other than Narendra Modi as CM. Neither did the CS opt for the
Centre, nor was his name cleared and forwarded by the state.
Assuming that all these
procedures are short-circuited for some grave national emergency (the central
government is not likely to collapse if the incumbent is not released), the
question still remains that it is the state that has finally to decide whether
to release him, even if it has ‘cleared’ his name for deputation in the first
place.
The Centre can raise this issue
further, but there is no time left for the matter to be dragged further as the
officer retires from service on the next working day, May 31.
The gross injustice of heckling
an officer of this rank by summoning him to Delhi on that very day hits even
those who are ardent fans of strong administration.
Yes, the service of the incumbent
has, indeed, been extended for three months, by this very central government
just four days ago but this is purely in the interests of continuity in the
fight against the raging pandemic — not to be, say, Union Secretary for
Panchayati Raj.
The so-called order is surely
nothing more than an expression of the central government's frustration and
rage.
The law and the established
procedures are in favour of the state government and even though the Centre has
alerted the Administrative Tribunal, it will surely sweat profusely to justify
its ham-handed and quite unprecedented order in the light of the law and
natural justice.
It can huff and it can puff, but
it can do little else. It could not have issued similar unilateral orders of
transfer of four IPS officers from the state to the Centre the last time, a few
months ago, because pique is no substitute for governance. Better legal counsel
must have prevailed, and this “order” is even more ridiculous. It cannot stop
the officer’s pension under any circumstances and the law is very clear on
this.
The order is absurdly and
politically vindictive but we must also understand that it highlights not only
the sheer pettiness of the Prime Minister but his style of constantly attacking
the foe in his/her own territory, very much like Kabaddi. And as it happens in
this game, the attackers gets pinned down and knocked out.
In an earlier prediction made on
May 1 in these columns before the Assembly election results were out (“My
fear: Whoever wins, trouble and chaos lurk”), one had mentioned that “one is
quite apprehensive that trouble and chaos may thus rule, at least in the near
future”.
It is time to realise that all
the dots that appeared thereafter join together — the shrill campaign to
declare President's Rule because of a bout of post-election violence; the swoop
at dawn to arrest prominent leaders of the ruling party and consigning them to
jail and this present assault of federalism. Modi has, somehow, vent his wrath
at the historic vote against him by the electors of this state and, more
important, he must nail Mamata Banerjee to Bengal as he is almost certain that
she is appearing as the only Opposition leader in India who is a real threat to
him.
The boy from the small town of
Vadnagar has met his match in the feisty woman in hawai chappals from the
bylanes of Kalighat.
*********
Those endowed with some minimal
education are usually fortunate enough to be exposed to knowledge and to
civilising values that assist them in developing their world view beyond the
small universe into which they are born. It usually leads to the realisation
that life is not just scoring points and intimidation.
But some who were unfortunate
enough to be bred in painfully underdeveloped regions, such as Sicily and
Calabria in south Italy, could not however avail of the broader civilisational
virtues of America even after they migrated there in the early part of the 20th
century. They continued to believe in the power of their rustic stiletto dagger
that could lunge deep into the enemy’s heart and were exhilarated by the power
and resources that capitulated before them. Civilisation, however, hit back in
due course — exterminating the scourge of their unfettered gangsterism.
Other nations have also gone
through similar learning cycles where such vicious fringe forces are concerned,
but not until they have wreaked their complete cycle of havoc that propels
them, quite genetically.
In a large but underdeveloped
democratic polity and a struggling developing economy, crude operators can
strengthen their position through mutually beneficial alliances with big
capital, and then move on to perfect heavily-funded electoral management. They
delight in letting loose a well-planned, systems-driven, relentless
juggernaut on lesser-equipped, naturally-divided democratic forces.
Once they and their enthralled
brown-shirts have attained their objective of seizing power through democracy,
they are terribly uncomfortable with irritants like plural, liberal democracy.
The regime thus established goes around tackling the messy inheritance of
constitutional governance by corroding and destroying national-level
institutions and all organisations that ensure democratic governance.
It achieves this with the
connivance of user-friendly aspirants among the elite corps of the bureaucracy
— who are so easily persuaded by assured promotion to the highly coveted posts,
in this cut-throat competitive market. The regime then lets loose these hounds
and their agencies of investigation and command to bludgeon into submission the
institutions of constitutional governance, as they are so high on smash and
grab that they forget to rule and deliver.
The all-knowing whisperatti of
Delhi discuss, in hushed tones, their methodology used in specific cases
— like persuasion, cajoling, temptation, transferring incumbents (where
possible), bullying and finally, threatening with hints of minutely detailed
dossiers on them. Much of the ‘dark side’ reportedly flaunted could well
consists of exaggerations, perverted interpretations or simply imaginative
constructions of falsehood.
One can now understand why the
most protected and respected of national institutions are collapsing before
such an onslaught, while others have simply been taken over by foisting the
regime’s trusted and surely amoral bureaucrats.
(PleaseClick Here to Read the article on The Telegraph Website)
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