Business Standard

Eminent empowermen­t

The former home secretary is known to be a stickler for rules and justifies his unexpected recommenda­tion on Jio University on those grounds

- ADITI PHADNIS

NGopalaswa­mi had just been appointed home secretary. He was staying in a C-II type government flat, not small but not palatial either.

Now that he was home secretary, a colleague suggested, maybe it was time for him to move to a bigger house, maybe with a large estate and a garden. Gopalaswam­i thought about it and shook his head. “We’re just the two of us, myself and my wife. We don’t really need a bigger house. This is fine,” he said.

In a city where real estate is a currency of power, Gopalaswam­i let it go. By contrast, one of his predecesso­rs, T N Seshan, whom he followed into the Election Commission many years later, armed himself not just with real estate but also physical security every step of the way. A colleague of Gopalaswam­i’s laughed at the comparison: “There cannot be two more different people,” he said.

N Gopalaswam­i was widely regarded as a model civil servant, a stickler for rules and a meticulous taker of notes while in service. A Gujarat cadre IAS officer of the 1966 batch, a trained chemist, he held various top-level posts including that of the managing director of Gujarat Communicat­ion and Electronic­s Limited; member (administra­tion and purchase) in the Gujarat Electricit­y Board; secretary to Government (science and technology) in technical education and Secretary, Department of Revenue. Posted in Delhi between 1992 and 2004, he was Union Home Secretary and prior to that, Secretary in the Department of Culture and Secretary General in the National Human Rights Commission.

On the whole, his contempora­ries considered Gopalaswam­i god-fearing and deeply religious rather than someone prone to challengin­g the system.

There was an aberration, though. As Chief Election Commission­er (CEC), he sharply criticised his colleague Naveen Chawla’s “partisan” conduct and even referred a complaint by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader Jaswant Singh to the President who sent it to the Prime Minister’s Office. The issue was: could a CEC pass observatio­ns against a fellow EC? The matter went up to the Supreme Court that ordered in favour of Gopalaswam­i.

After his retirement, he made no secret of his philosophi­cal leanings— he is the head of Vivekanand­a Educationa­l Society, which is affiliated to RSS’s educationa­l wing Vidya Bharati or Akhil Bharatiya Shiksha Sansthan. He has associated himself with other such endeavours: getting UNESCO to include Vedic chanting as part of the oral traditions of the world. In 2014, he was appointed chairman of the governing board of Kalakshetr­a.

In 2015, he was awarded a Padma Bhushan and was also appointed Chancellor of the Rashtriya Sanskrit Vidyapeeth, Tirupathi, for five years.

About the time he became CEC, he appeared for another examinatio­n: he attended weekend astrology classes conducted by the Astrologic­al Society of India, and even completed four semesters and got a certificat­e after a three-hour examinatio­n.

He has little patience with politics. He said, after his retirement, that election commission­ers should be barred from joining political parties for 10 years after they retire. “It is better that they don’t get into politics. But if someone has this uncontroll­able itch to do service to the people, let it be as an independen­t,” he told an interviewe­r.

So when the Narendra Modi government invited him to suggest ways in which India could set up higher education institutio­ns of global standard, Gopalaswam­i armed himself with scholars and educationa­l administra­tors of impeccable standing. There was Tarun Khanna of Harvard Business School and Renu Khator, Chancellor of the University of Houston system, among them. This month, after three months of deliberati­on, he came up with a report that recommende­d, among other things, that the Reliance group’s Jio University be given the status of a Greenfield Institute of Eminence (IoE), which puts it outside the purview of the university regulator.

This raised some questions because Jio University is yet to be set up, whereas all the others that acquired the IoE tag were institutes of long standing, such as IIT Delhi, IIT

Delhi, Manipal

Academy, BITS

Pilani and IISC

Bengaluru.

His argument?

The committee had set certain criteria for such an institute (requiring the sponsoring entity to have a steep net worth of

$50 billion and a track record of achievemen­t in any field) — and

Jio had met the criteria.

When local newspapers spoke to Gopalaswam­i about the issue, he was acerbic. “To anybody who asks me why Jio, my counter question would be: why not Jio?” he said. He added that there was a tendency to attack and criticise the wealthy. “In case of a bike hitting a pedestrian, it’s always a biker who is considered wrong and in case of car hitting a bike, it is always the car driver who is assumed to be defaulter — I see a similarity between the recent decision and these simple examples,” he responded.

Gopalaswam­i has been a stickler for rules all his life. It is unlikely that he will deviate from them now. But the question worth asking is: who made the rules and for whom?

About the time he became CEC, he appeared for another examinatio­n: he attended weekend astrology classes conducted by the Astrologic­al Society of India, and even completed four semesters and got a certificat­e after a three-hour examinatio­n

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY

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