Hindustan Times (Delhi)

AAP issues order on transfers, babus deem it ‘legally incorrect’

- Sweta Goswami and Ashish Mishra htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Hours after the Supreme Court verdict, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government issued an order withdrawin­g all powers of transfer and posting of IAS officers and other employees from the lieutenant government, the chief secretary and heads of department­s.

But the order issued by deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia was returned by bureaucrat­s in the evening on the grounds that it was “legally incorrect”.

This was the first file moved by Sisodia after the judgment. The return of the order by officers hints that the tussle between the political executive and the bureaucrac­y is unlikely to end anytime soon.

According to the order issued by Sisodia–who is also minister of the services department–the chief minister will approve transfers of IAS, DANICS, all-india services officers, equivalent officers of the central civil services and provincial civil services. The L-G was earlier approving such orders.

The transfers and postings of Delhi Administra­tive Subordinat­e Services (DASS) Grade-i, II, principal private secretary and private secretary will be approved by the deputy chief minister. These officers were earlier transferre­d by the chief secretary.

The minister-in-charge (services) will have a say in the transfer and posting of DASS grade-iii and IV officers and of stenos, which was earlier being cleared by the principal secretary of the department. Other employees of cadre and ex-cadre officers within the department will be transferre­d and posted by the department minister concerned.

But uncertaint­y looms over Sisodia’s order as bureaucrat­s returned the file, saying it was legally untenable. “The services department had come under the L-G after a home ministry notificati­on issued in May 2015. But the notificati­on, addressed to the President, has not been set aside by the Supreme Court,” said a government official.

An advisor to the government refused to comment on the file being returned.

Bureaucrat­s said the issue of control over transfers and postings will be taken up by the regular bench of the Supreme Court. “So it is the regular bench that will decide. Also, ‘services’ still lies with the L-G because Delhi is a Union Territory and does not fall under the concurrent and state lists,” an official said.

Former bureaucrat­s said the gist of the SC order was that the elected government of Delhi and the lieutenant- governor needed to perform their functions in coordinati­on.

“Earlier too, the chief minister could give their recommenda­tions on the matter of transfers and postings but the final call was of the L-G. The government needs to better its relations with the Centre and officers so that work is not affected,” said former chief secretary of Delhi Omesh Saigal.

Reacting to the judgment, members of the IAS associatio­n said the verdict does not completely go in favour of Kejriwal. “Only the contours of the constituti­on was laid out and the principles for the L-G and the government were stated. The only relief the government got is that now it won’t need the L-G’S concurrenc­e on every file,” a bureaucrat said.

Services has been a bone of contention between the L-G and the Delhi cabinet ever since the AAP came to power in 2015.

The controvers­y erupted after the L-G appointed then principal secretary (power) Shakuntala Gamlin as the interim chief secretary in the absence of KK Sharma.

The order drew strong criticism from Kejriwal who called the appointmen­t as illegal.

 ??  ?? An alleged assault on chief secy Anshu Prakash had led to a bitter row between the govt and the bureaucrac­y.
An alleged assault on chief secy Anshu Prakash had led to a bitter row between the govt and the bureaucrac­y.

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