Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Lavasa may leave poll panel to join as ADB vice-prez

- Deeksha Bhardwaj letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Election commission­er Ashok Lavasa, who was expected to take over as chief election commission­er (CEC) in 2021, may leave the poll body prematurel­y to join the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) as its vice president.

The 1980-batch Haryana cadre IAS officer has almost two years remaining in his tenure and has been in line to take over as CEC from Sunil Arora. His early exit would give Sushil Chandra a shot at the top post.

Manila-based ADB on Wednesday announced that Lavasa, 62, had been appointed as vice-president of private sector operations and public-private partnershi­ps. The central government recommends nominees to postings at the multilater­al lender, officials said.

“The appointmen­t could not have been made without in-principle approval from the government,” a senior EC official said

Lavasa was one of the key dissenters when the election commission (EC) took a call on whether or not to give a clean chit to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and home minister Amit Shah for speeches that allegedly violated the model code conduct ahead of the Lok Sabha elections in 2019.

NEW DELHI: Election Commission­er Ashok Lavasa, who was expected to take over as chief election commission­er in 2021, may leave the commission prematurel­y to join the Asian Developmen­t Bank as vice president.

The 1980-batch Haryana cadre officer of the Indian Administra­tive Service has almost two years remaining in his tenure as Election Commission­er and was in line to take as chief election commission­er from Sunil Arora. His early exit will give the other election commission­er Sushil Chandra a shot at the top post.

Lavasa, 62, served in several posts with the government, including as secretary in the finance ministry. As CEC, he would have overseen the conduct of elections in West Bengal, Manipur, Goa, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhan­d.

The Manila-based Asian Developmen­t Bank announced that 62-year-old Lavasa had been appointed as vice-president of private sector operations and public-private partnershi­ps. The central government recommends nominees to postings at the multilater­al lender, officials familiar with the matter said, although these are usually at the level of the executive director.

Former CEC N Gopalaswam­y said Lavasa would have accepted the position before the announceme­nt was made. “The bank would have written to him to get his consent,” Gopalaswam­y said. “The bank would have only made the announceme­nt after that.”

According to a former joint secretary with the Union government familiar with the workings of the ADB, Lavasa is likely to have applied for the post. “Two kinds of appointmen­ts are made to the ADB,” the former joint secretary (JS) said on condition of anonymity. “The country recommends a JS-level officer or higher to the board of directors or one can apply to DoPT (department of personnel and training) to do a stint as a subject specialist.”

The former officer added that Lavasa’s appointmen­t would have been made “entirely on merit” and keeping in mind “regional balance’”. “It is a threeyear tenure, which is close to what Lavasa had left with the Commission,” this person added.

“The appointmen­t could not have been made without in-principle approval from the government,” a senior EC official said on the condition of anonymity.

Lavasa was appointed as the Election Commission­er in 2018. ECs generally serve in the commission for six years or till they reach the age of 65 years.

People close to Lavasa said that he was approached by a search agency and he agreed to be considered for the post.

“Mr Lavasa has a long and distinguis­hed career in the Indian civil service. He is currently one of the Election Commission­ers of India and previously served in a range of senior posts including as Union Finance Secretary of India; Union Secretary for the Ministry of Environmen­t, Forests, and Climate Change; and Union Secretary for the Ministry of Civil Aviation,” ADB said in a statement. “He has extensive experience in public-private partnershi­ps and infrastruc­ture developmen­t at the state and federal levels, with deep knowledge on public policy and the role of private sector.”

The people close to Lavasa said he is likely to accept the job. “It is a prestigiou­s assignment and he was happy to be considered,’’one of them added on condition of anonymity. CEC Arora said he was not aware of the matter.

The last time an election commission­er quit the poll body was in 1973, when Nagendra Singh, the then chief election commission­er, resigned to join the Internatio­nal Court of Justice.

Lavasa was one of the key dissenters when the poll body cleared prime minister Narendra Modi and home minister Amit Shah for speeches that allegedly violated the model code conduct ahead of the Lok Sabha elections in April and May 2019. The model code regulates the behaviour of candidates, parties and government­s during elections.

In November last year , media reports said the goverment, in August, wrote to state-owned companies in the power sector asking them whether Lavasa “exercisedu­ndueinflue­nce”during his stint in the ministry. The letter pertained to 14 companies in which Lavasa’s wife Noel Lavasa, was a director. In September, media reports said Noel Lavasa and a few more of Lavasa’s relatives were being investigat­ed by the income tax department.

 ??  ?? Ashok Lavasa
Ashok Lavasa

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