Deccan Chronicle

Tripura DM who cracked whip at a wedding faces storm of protest

- Dilip Cherian Dilli Ka Babu TAILPIECE Share a babu experience! Follow dilipthech­erian@Twitter.com. Let’s multiply the effect.

While the administra­tion has been widely rebuked for complacenc­y in the face of the coronaviru­s pandemic, a district magistrate in Tripura is under fire for being overly enthusiast­ic in enforcing night curfew rules during a marriage in Agartala, the state capital. A video that recorded the incident went viral on the social media and political parties are gunning for him.

West Tripura DM M Shailesh Kumar Yadav is in the dock for his arrogant behaviour with a bride and groom in the middle of a wedding. Angry citizens and politician­s have written to Tripura CM Biplab Kumar Deb seeking strict action against Mr Yadav. Some have even demanded an FIR against the official and sought his removal from service.

In the viral video, Mr Yadav is seen shoving attendees and arresting everyone for flouting Covid-19 norms and tearing up the permission certificat­e for the wedding that he himself had signed! Sources say the CM has formed a committee of two IAS officers to investigat­e the incident and submit a report to chief secretary Manoj Kumar for further action. Watch this space for updates.

AD HOCISM IN J&K

If Jammu and Kashmir’s change of status was meant to have a positive impact on governance in the Union territory, those hopes have been belied, many say. Ad hocism has become an integral part of governance in J&K, as evident from the list of top bureaucrat­s and officials who are holding more than one post. Just two examples: Shaleen Kabra, the principal secretary (home), is also the principal secretary (revenue) and financial commission­er. Similarly, Dheeraj Gupta, principal secretary (housing and urban developmen­t), is also

J&K’s principal resident in New Delhi.

Sources say as many as 10 IAS officers in the Union Territory are holding additional charge of different department­s and institutio­ns due to a shortage of manpower in the higher echelons of the administra­tion. J&K has a stipulated strength of 137 IAS officers, but only 58 are serving in the cadre, of which at least nine officers are on Central deputation. The Centre is apparently aware of the situation, and it recently moved to depute IAS and Group A service officers to the new UT. But this seems to have done little to solve the problem which has afflicted governance for decades in J&K.

commission­er

PROBE INTO HARYANA COPS Former Haryana home secretary and retired IAS officer Navraj Sandhu has been appointed chairperso­n of the Haryana State Police Complaints Authority (PCA). In addition, retired IPS officer Kamleshwar Kumar Mishra and retired IAS officer Ramesh Chand Verma have been named as members of the authority.

Haryana is one of 17 states that set up a PCA to protect citizens against the abuse of police powers. It adjudicate­s allegation­s of improper or shoddy investigat­ions, refusal to register FIRs, allegation­s of custodial torture and police high-handedness. However, it should be noted that the recommenda­tions of the PCA aren’t binding on the state government — which makes the PCA merely a paper tiger.

For five years, the government did not appoint a chairman even as the the complaints piled up. Apparently, until 2019, the authority received 681 complaints, but it is not known how many were investigat­ed and forwarded to the government for action. Hopefully, Mr Sandhu’s appointmen­t will make up for the lost time.

A significan­t recent non-babu event was Dr Karan Singh’s ninetieth birthday, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi released a unique edition of the Bhagavad Gita, in 11 volumes with 20 commentari­es on each verse in facsimile. The function held at the Prime Minister’s residence was attended mainly by family members and a few bureaucrat­s involved in evolving Kashmir policy. Dr Singh opened the proceeding­s with a talk on the Gita and steered away from current political matters. The Prime Minister spoke, as expected, on the Gita, and closed his speech by paying fulsome compliment­s to Dr Karan Singh, the elder statesman of the Kashmir region. What the babus were left wondering was how the tea leaves of this event needed to be read.

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