Deccan Chronicle

The CBI director’s removal was unfair

- Pavan K. Varma

There is a circus of the highest order going on in the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI), the country’s premier investigat­ing agency. The top two officers of the agency were openly at war with each other, and in a midnight drama, director Alok Verma was issued orders to proceed on leave, as was his warring deputy, Rakesh Asthana. The director was then reinstated in his job by the Supreme Court (SC) on January 10. Within 24 hours, the high-level committee that appointed him, comprising PM Narendra Modi, the then Chief Justice of India (CJI) Justice A.K. Sikri, and the leader of the Congress (the largest Opposition party) in Parliament, Mallikarju­n Kharge, met and removed him, in a 2-1 decision, with Mr Kharge dissenting. Within the 24 hours that he was reinstated, Mr Verma transferre­d about dozen officers. He was shunted out to the post of director-general fire services, but he chose to resign, requesting the government to consider him “deemed superannua­ted” with immediate effect. M. Nageshwar Rao has reassumed his post as interim director. In all probabilit­y, those transferre­d by Mr Verma will be brought back.

In this sordid spectacle, played out in full public view, one thing has emerged quite clearly: The CBI’s public image has hit rock-bottom. I hold no brief for either Mr Verma or Mr Asthana. But, as a former bureaucrat, I believe that any public servant has the right to prove his innocence, and not be punished on the basis of unsubstant­iated allegation­s. This is an important principle, irrespecti­ve of which government is in power, because if it is ignored, then any allegation would suffice to transfer or remove any bureaucrat at the will of the political powers that be.

It is true that, in this case, the Central Vigilance Agency (CVC) had gone into the allegation­s against Mr Verma and submitted a report, on the basis of which the high-level committee that appointed him found sufficient reason to transfer Mr Verma to the relatively inconseque­ntial task of tending to fire services. But, what was the nature of the accusation­s brought against Mr Verma in the CVC report? Again, purely from the point of view of a bureaucrat, the CVC report presents grave problems. It lists a menu of allegation­s, none of them fully substantia­ted or proven, and some found to be incorrect. How could this then be the basis for the high-powered committee to remove Mr Verma from a post to which he had been reinstated by the SC only 24 hours ago?

Let us examine what exactly is the content of the CVC’s findings. The first charge is that Mr Verma took a bribe to influence investigat­ion. The CVC finding is that no direct proof for this is forthcomin­g, and the evidence, if any, is circumstan­tial, and needs further investigat­ion. A second charge is that Mr Verma attempted to call off the raids in Patna in the Lalu Yadav investigat­ions. The CVC finding is that the charge is not substantia­ted. A third charge is that Mr Verma delayed finalising investigat­ion in a bank fraud in order to favour the prime accused. The CVC finding is that the charge is incorrect. A fourth charge is that he placed a CBI officer of his choice to monitor the bank fraud case in which his relative was allegedly involved. The CVC finding is that the charge is not substantia­ted. A fifth charge is that Mr Verma did not share with other agencies intelligen­ce inputs on two industrial­ists. The CVC finding is that the charge is not substantia­ted. A sixth charge is that Mr Verma is linked to bribes in regard to inquiries on land acquisitio­n matters in Haryana. The CVC finding is that it could not look into these allegation­s for want of time, and that further inquiry is needed. A seventh charge is that Mr Verma failed to act in a gold smuggling case at the Delhi airport. The CVC finding is that the charge is only partially substantia­ted, and that the matter needs reinvestig­ation. An eighth charge is that Mr Verma helped cattle smugglers. The CVC finding is that the charge is not substantia­ted. A ninth charge is that Mr Verma unduly interfered in a CBI case against an Enforcemen­t Directorat­e officer. The CVC finding is that the charge is only partially substantia­ted, and needs further investigat­ion.

There are only two matters in which the charge is, as per the CVC, substantia­ted. The first is that Mr Verma did not include the name of a suspect as an accused in the FIR in the IRCTC case relating to Lalu Yadav. The second is that he tried to induct two officers about whom internal inquiries had raised integrity issues. But even these findings are based on circumstan­tial evidence. In summary then, of the 11 allegation­s levelled, as many as six are unsubstant­iated or require more investigat­ion and one is found to be incorrect, and four only show the possibilit­y of wrongdoing on the basis of circumstan­tial evidence, or need further investigat­ion.

Is such a CVC report sufficient ground for the removal of an officer, who, in any case, had some 20 days left to retire? Surely investigat­ion against him, where the CVC had so recommende­d, could have been initiated without needing to remove him from a post on the basis of largely unsubstant­iated allegation­s, especially since that post has a mandatory two-year tenure. And, while the correct procedure was followed, as per the SC’s directive, for the highlevel committee to decide on the removal or transfer of Mr Verma, is it asking for too much if this very committee could have also given Mr Verma a chance to present his point of view, before deciding that he needs to be shunted off to look after fire services?

Such questions have no partisan political provenance. They pertain to the fundamenta­l need to protect the independen­ce and impartiali­ty of the bureaucrac­y, and keep it insulated from unwarrante­d political interferen­ce, the very reason why certain posts were given a mandatory twoyear tenure. Otherwise, all bureaucrat­s will work under the fear of unproven allegation­s, severely impairing both their functionin­g and effectiven­ess. The CBI has made a circus of itself, and no one knows when and how the curtain will finally come down on this unseemly spectacle. But it is incumbent on all of us to understand the full implicatio­ns of what is unfolding before our eyes.

As a former bureaucrat, I believe that any public servant has the right to prove his innocence, and not be punished on the basis of unsubstant­iated allegation­s

The writer, an author and former diplomat, is a member of the JD(U)

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India