Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

The Centre must order an enquiry

Don’t sacrifice the trust CBI enjoys at the altar of an ego war

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The Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) has been, irrespecti­ve of the government of the day, accused of targeting the ruling dispensati­on’s opponents. It is also no stranger to controvers­y. Most of those deal with specific cases, the agency’s investigat­ions into these, the motivation­s of these investigat­ions, corruption, and the like.

ourtake The appointmen­t of the director of CBI has been, irrespecti­ve of the government of the day, a political one. That’s not to comment on the qualificat­ions or standing of the people chosen for the post — some have gone on to serve the agency well — but merely a statement of fact; the government gets to choose the CBI chief.

This is an important preamble because never in the agency’s 55-year-old history has it witnessed the situation it is doing so now. The facts of the case are simple: the government wanted a certain person for the job; it couldn’t give it to him because he wasn’t senior enough; it, therefore, found someone else, whom it thought would be a good fit for the top job at CBI; when its own candidate became senior enough, it promoted him to the No.2 post, presumably hoping that he would take over after No.1’s term ended (at the end of 2018). Unfortunat­ely, because its preference was known, No.1 never trusted No.2. And the stage was set for a drama of Shakespear­ean proportion­s. There are people who are loyal to and support the director, Alok Verma. There are those who are loyal to and support the special director, Rakesh Asthana. Each has levelled allegation­s against the other. And the agency went to the extent of filing a complaint against one of its own. The matter has reached the Delhi High Court, which seems to have restored some sense of proportion to events by asking everyone to maintain “status quo” till October 29.

The government, which has so far remained silent, should order an enquiry by the Chief Vigilance Commission­er into the charges and the counter-charges; it could (and should) ask both Mr Verma and Mr Asthana to go into silent mode (it could even ask them to proceed on leave); and it should, once the CVC submits its findings, act on them. The agency reports to the Prime Minister’s Office, which should quickly address the controvers­y. Irrespecti­ve of what politician­s and political parties think of the CBI, the federal investigat­ive agency is trusted by most Indians. That trust shouldn’t be sacrificed at the altar of what is essentiall­y a battle of egos.

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