The Asian Age

Did India’s babus miss the bus, fail to read signals right on Taliban?

- Dilip Cherian Dilli Ka Babu Share a babu experience! Follow dilipthech­erian@Twitter.com. Let’s multiply the effect.

Did India miss a bus in Afghanista­n? With the Taliban takeover of the country complete, the ominous silence from the ministry of external affairs (MEA), except for the routine statement on protecting Indian interests and giving temporary visas to Afghan refugees, was, however, broken by global outcries. While Western powers were expected to do this, for India whose relationsh­ip with Afghanista­n goes back a few millennia, the speed at which events have occurred in Afghanista­n has come as a bit of a shock for some desi mandarins.

There are some whispers that external affairs minister S. Jaishankar’s policy framework is now in shambles. That aside, babus worry that both the Pakistan angle and the China threat gets to grow into a bigger thorn in India’s vulnerable Northwest. Foreign secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla and his cohorts at the Afghan desk may have some massive round robinning to do, and our encircleme­nt worry is on the front burner yet again.

Some in the MEA feel that we clearly missed the signals emanating from the Doha meet last August, to which India, incidental­ly, was not invited, and some believe that we left starting direct talks with the Taliban leadership far too late. We now may have to stand along the sidelines as a spectator than a player in this episode of the fast-paced “Great Game”. But at least one source of comfort is that our embassy evacuation was executed well in the nick of time.

WHEN A REPATRIATI­ON RAISES EYEBROWS

Frequent lateral shifts are par for the course. You may feel they happen more often in the Narendra Modi sarkar but there're no stats readily available. Seasoned babus are usually not fazed by such disruption­s. Yet in a recent major reshuffle of over a dozen senior IAS officers, one move by the government seems to have raised eyebrows. 1989-batch IAS officer Shubhra Singh was certainly caught by surprise. She was removed as chairperso­n of the National Pharmaceut­ical Pricing Authority (NPPA), the independen­t regulator responsibl­e for drug pricing and availabili­ty. She has been repatriate­d to Rajasthan, her cadre state, and replaced by K.K. Pant, a 1993-batch officer of the Himachal Pradesh cadre.

Sources tell DKB that the repatriati­on was unexpected since she was widely expected to be empanelled for a secretary-level post in the government, having missed out her chance on the first list. Usually while shifting or repatriati­ng senior officers, the government takes them into confidence, but like many administra­tive norms, this convention too may be heading for oblivion. Any examples you can think of?

RETURN OF THE NATIVE

It seems that Shah Faesal, the IAS officer from Jammu & Kashmir who resigned in 2019 in protest against the Centre's policies towards the region, may rejoin the civil service. Sources have told DKB that the Centre has still not taken on any decision on Faesal’s resignatio­n, and the rules state that in such a scenario the resignatio­n is considered withdrawn automatica­lly! The official stance, according to the department of personnel and training (DoPT), is that the resignatio­n “is still under considerat­ion”.

Mr Faesal controvers­ially quit the IAS and formed a political party in Kashmir, the Jammu and Kashmir People’s Movement. He was a strident critic of the Centre’s decision to make Article 370 inoperativ­e in J&K. But his stint in politics was largely uneventful and he announced that he was done with political life. Apparently, after his resignatio­n, Mr Faesal’s request to be allowed to travel and settle in the US was denied. Rejoining the IAS may be his best option, sources say. But will he take it?

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