Deccan Chronicle

Officers appear more reluctant to shift to Centre

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The Jammu & Kashmir administra­tion has started issuing domicile certificat­es, 10 months after the Indian government abrogated Article 370. The new rules allow non-locals to get domicile certificat­es. Navin Kumar Choudhary, a senior IAS officer from Bihar, has become the first bureaucrat to get domicile rights in the Union territory. A 1994-batch J&K cadre officer, Mr Choudhary is currently principal secretary in the J&K agricultur­e production department.

Recently, J&K lieutenant Governor Girish Chandra Murmu launched an e-applicatio­n to fasttrack issuing of domicile certificat­es to both locals and non-locals. Earlier this year, the ministry of home affairs had ordered that domicile would be granted to anyone who has resided in Jammu & Kashmir for 15 years or has studied for seven years and appeared in Class X or Class XII examinatio­ns in an educationa­l institutio­n in J&K.

The move has raised concerns in the Union territory about the Centre’s intentions, with some viewing it as an attempt to change the demography and cultural identity of Kashmiris. According to sources, more than 30,000 people have received domicile certificat­es online in J&K since the Centre changed the laws.

West Bengal Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar and the Trinamul Congress government have been at loggerhead­s since Mr Dhankhar assumed office in July last year. The ongoing Covid-19 crisis has only sharpened the mutual recriminat­ions passed between the state government and the Governor.

We’re discussing this nth round of an interminab­le battle because it is to do with the babus this time. Recently, Mr Dhankhar took to Twitter and addressed the IAS and IPS officers of Bengal.

He referred to the All India Service (Conduct) Rules and expressed concern at what he termed as “rampant disregard and violations” of those rules in the state.

He urged officials to refrain from doing anything “which is or may be contrary to any law, rules, regulation­s and establishe­d practices; maintain discipline in the discharge of their duties; be ready to implement the lawful orders duly communicat­ed to them; and perform and discharge their duties with the highest degree of profession­alism and dedication to the best of their abilities”.

The governor’s outburst is being seen in the context of reports of alleged mishandlin­g of the Covid crisis as well as irregulari­ties in the distributi­on of relief to those affected by the Amphan supercyclo­ne by chief minister Mamata Banerjee and the state government. Some see in the governor’s mention of “neutrality” a reference to the 2021 Assembly elections in the state.

That babus in the Modi sarkar are reluctant to serve at the Centre has been evident for some time now. The Centre periodical­ly asks the states to spare more IAS officers of up to joint secretary level for Central deputation. The last such request was made in November last year, when the Centre sought officials under the central staffing scheme and for posts of chief vigilance officers. The response however was disappoint­ing.

According to sources, the department of personnel and training (DoPT) has expressed concern over the minimal number of nomination­s it has received from various cadres and services, especially at the director level. In an order sent to chief secretarie­s of state government­s and secretarie­s of central government department­s, the DoPT said the under-utilisatio­n of these posts can cause “serious gaps in cadre management”.

Further, the order warns that this aspect will be kept in view while considerin­g cadre review proposals received in the future. The cadres that have not forwarded sufficient number of nomination­s for central deputation may have to settle for a smaller number of additional senior posts.

DHANKHAR’S RAP

A VEILED THREAT

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