Millennium Post

SC to hear plea against Asthana’s appointmen­t as interim CBI chief

- MPOST BUREAU

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court will on Friday hear a PIL by NGO Common Cause challengin­g appointmen­t of Rakesh Asthana as the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion’s interim Director, on grounds it was arbitrary and overlooked establishe­d procedure.

A bench of Chief Justice T.S. Thakur, Justice D.y.chandrachu­d and Justice L. Nageswara Rao agreed to hear the PIL after Common Cause lawyer Pranav Sachdeva sought an early hearing.

The petitioner alleged that the government took some steps, including the shifting of former Special Director R.K. Dutta to the Home Ministry, to facilitate bringing Asthana as the interim director.

Seeking the quashing of Asthana’s appointmen­t, Common Cause has sought direction to the Central government to initiate the process for appointmen­t of a regular director of the premier investigat­ing agency as per the law.

The society has contended that the government has acted in a “mala fide, arbitrary and illegal manner” to ensure appointmen­t of Asthana as interim director of the CBI.

It further says that just two days before Director Anil Sinha was to step down on December 2, 2016, Dutta was transferre­d to Union Home Ministry by creating a post of Special Secretary by upgrading by two layers the post of the joint secretary.

This, it said, was done to frustrate the chances of Dutta stepping into the shoes of Sinha as he was number two in the hierarchy of the investigat­ing agency.

The petition has pointed out that it was for the first time in one decade that an interim director was thrust on the investigat­ing agency. It said that the process for the appointmen­t of Sinha’s successor should have commenced well in advance.

Common Cause, in its PIL, cited the Lokpal and Lokayuktas Act, 2013 and Delhi Special Police Establishm­ent Act, 1946, under which the CBI Director is selected by a committee comprising the Prime Minister, leader of the single largest opposition party and Chief Justice of India (or any judge nominated by him).

This shows that the “Government wanted to appoint its own choice as Interim CBI Director, even if it meant bypassing the statutory law, the norms of propriety, and the directions (of the apex court) ... in Vineet Narain’s case”.

It has also recalled the recent direction of the top court directing the government to appoint a full-time Director of the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e in a time frame.

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