The Asian Age

Forcing caged parrot to sing master’s tune

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For as long as one may recall, the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion has enjoyed the reputation of serving its political masters, irrespecti­ve of the government in office, and in the process sacrificin­g any sense of profession­al efficiency and culture. In 2013, the Supreme Court had called it “a caged parrot”. This basically meant being its political master’s voice. Considerin­g the scale of happenings today, this was mild reproof. Under the present government, the investigat­ion outfit has turned against itself in the course of serving the present political master and has perhaps forfeited any claim to being an anti- corruption body.

The Central Vigilance Commission is meant to be a watchdog looking at what the CBI is doing. The CBI director has a protected two- year term which ends in January 2019. After the earlier upheavals in the investigat­ing agency and the allegation of partisansh­ip routinely flung against it, the country decided that the appointee should be cleared by a collegium comprising the PM, the Chief Justice of India and the Leader of the Opposition.

CBI director Alok Verma has been thus cleared. It became plain, however, that shortly after his appointmen­t the Narendra Modi government imposed Rakesh Asthana on the CBI, a senior Gujarat cadre police officer in whose impartiali­ty the director had little faith. This was in the face of written submission­s of the director before appropriat­e bodies. Even so, the CVC upheld Mr Asthana’s appointmen­t as special director. Why? Following this, the Supreme Court gave the CVC the benefit of the doubt? Again why?

It is evident that the system has shown itself to be deeply compromise­d. When the CBI director opposed the appointmen­t of Mr Asthana on grounds of investigat­ion being conducted against certain entities relating to Mr Asthana daughter’s wedding in Vadodra and his associatio­n with another probe, on what authority did the Cabinet Appointmen­ts Committee clear the latter’s appointmen­t as special director in the CBI?

Circumstan­tially, the suggestion seems to be that Mr Asthana had the backing of powerful entities that could only have been political. Since director Verma appeared to enjoy bipartisan support, as his appointmen­t suggests, was someone high up needed in the CBI to do the bidding of the government? If so, open warring between the director and the special director became a foregone conclusion.

But we should be clear that this is not a case of turf war between the director and the special director foisted on him. The fundamenta­l basis of the turmoil in the CBI, from which it may find it difficult to extricate itself in the foreseeabl­e future, is the implanting of the special director for political reasons.

In the first instance, the top court should suo motu supervise the conduct of an inquiry into the appointmen­t of Mr Asthana as special director which seems in violation of laid- down procedures.

The fundamenta­l basis of the turmoil in the CBI, from which it may find it difficult to extricate itself in the foreseeabl­e future, is the implanting of the special director for political reasons

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