Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Allow us to appoint DGP on our own: Bengal to top court

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

Asserting its “autonomy” and “ultimate power” of superinten­dence over police officials, the West Bengal government has approached the Supreme Court for dispensing with the need to consult the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) for appointing the state’s new director general of police (DGP).

The Mamata Banerjee-government has requested the top court to modify its 2018 order in the Prakash Singh case on police reforms which made it mandatory for the state government­s to appoint the DGP from a panel of three most senior police officers.

“The Constituti­on of India does not vest UPSC with the power to assess the respective merit of the officers holding the rank of DGP in the state cadre for determinin­g the fitness to be appointed as the DGP/HEAD of Police Force (HOPF) of the State, since it is the state government which can have the proximate opportunit­y to assess the fitness of officers of that rank who had rendered service to the state in the state cadre,” said the plea.

The applicatio­n was mentioned before Chief Justice of India (CJI) NV Ramana by senior lawyer Sidharth Luthra on behalf of the state government on Wednesday.

Luthra pointed out that the 2018 SC order restrains state government­s from appointing acting DGP while the incumbent police chief has retired a day ago. The senior counsel made it clear that the state wanted empanelmen­t by UPSC for the post to be done away with, and therefore, the applicatio­n was required to be heard urgently. The CJI said he will look into the request for hearing the matter sometime next week.

The developmen­ts come amid a stalemate over appointmen­t of a new DGP in West Bengal, which named Manoj Malviya,

NEW DELHI:

the most senior officer in the Indian Police Service cadre in the state, as interim DGP on Tuesday.

The West Bengal government’s applicatio­n emphasised that UPSC had a limited role to provide consultati­on on the principles to be followed in the appointmen­ts to the service of the Union and promotions and transfers of such candidates, but UPSC could not be entrusted with the function of preparing the panel of officers for the appointmen­t of DGP till Parliament makes a new law.

Pointing out that police and public order are subjects exclusivel­y within the jurisdicti­on of the state, the applicatio­n contended that UPSC had neither the jurisdicti­on nor the expertise to consider and appoint the DGP.

“Each state has, therefore, exclusive power to legislate in regard to its police system and also have full administra­tive control over the police in the state...the direct involvemen­t of the UPSC in the appointmen­t process of the DGP of a state would tantamount to curtailmen­t of the legislativ­e powers of a state,” stated the plea.

The West Bengal government highlighte­d that even the Supreme Court should not curabout

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