Deccan Chronicle

Stop misusing transfers to rein in civil & police officers

-

The vice of transfers of police officials and civil servants has for long plagued public life and administra­tion in India. The latest example of this gross abuse of power by ministers comes from Kerala. On Jan 25, the Kerala government, run by the Communist Party of India (Marxist), removed Chaithra Teresa John from her post as temporary deputy commission­er of police, after she raided the party's district office.

The second report of the National Police Commission (1979) censured the practice. When it is not possible to punish a police officer legally, it is very easy to subject him to administra­tive action by way of transfer or suspension. Its threat is the most potent weapon in the hands of the minister to bend the police to his will. Forty years later, the situation, far from improving, has worsened. In states like Uttar Pradesh, each incoming government transfers civil servant and police officers en masse; right down to the level of superinten­dent. District magistrate­s are particular­ly targeted.

Such pressures on the police system from political and other extraneous sources weaken the normal chain of command, which has to operate efficientl­y if discipline is to be maintained. Interferen­ce at the operationa­l level results in the total bypassing of supervisor­y officers. Subordinat­e officers see every day that their superior officers count little in the ultimate disposal matters that would normally lie within their official cognisance. Decisions taken at a political level in government are implemente­d without question at the operationa­l level.

In May 1997, Justice Markandey Katju (then on the bench of the Allahabad High Court) delivered a strong and comprehens­ive judgement on transfers. The petitioner, a health centre worker, was transferre­d from Gopiganj to Bhadohi in June 1996. In August, the transfer order was cancelled. She alleged that it was done at the instance of Phoolan Devi, MP, which was also brazenly stated in cancellati­on order itself.

The judge held that "...the impugned order is wholly arbitrary as it has been passed solely on the dictates of a politician (as the order expressly states) and not on any administra­tive exigency . ... A highly pernicious virus which has crept into the governance of this state; namely the blatant and persistent abuse of the power of transfer and posting of government servants on political, caste, monetary or other extraneous considerat­ions instead of on administra­tive considerat­ions and in the public interest . ... It is regrettabl­e that in this state (and perhaps in other states too) transfer appears to have become an industry. Government servants are often treated like shuttlecoc­ks, to be banged and battered around frequently without any thought of the effect this is having on their morale and on the administra­tion."

To support the comment, he cited that from March 1991 to March 1997, as many as 16 senior superinten­dents had been appointed in Allahabad, some lasting for a month or two and one lasting for a mere 24 hours. Changes in government trigger a spate of transfers. Politicisa­tion of the services and transfers feed on each other.

The Supreme Court has deprecated the practice but done little to end it. In one notable case, an upright officer of the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion, N.K. Singh, claimed he was victimised because he had investigat­ed Sanjay Gandhi and his gang's destructio­n of the film Kissa Kursi Ka. The Chandra Shekhar government, propped up by Rajiv Gandhi, “elevated” him to a different post. He rightly complained this punishment in the guise of elevation. Justice J.S. Verma shut his eyes to the obvious and, instead, criticised Singh, who was universall­y respected for his integrity and independen­ce.

B.K. Nehru was also known for these qualities. In retirement he fought for the civil service. He wrote in his memoirs about his studies while serving as high commission­er to the UK: “All the three powers which are exercised by the minister in India to bend the civil servant to his will, namely, appointmen­ts, transfers and suspension­s, are not exercisabl­e by them at all in the United Kingdom. They are exercised by a very small group of senior secretarie­s presided over by the secretary of the Civil Service Department who reports to the prime minister direct. It is they who appoint people, transfer them and punish them, not the ministers. The prime minister of course approves their proposals, but when I asked the head of the Civil Service Department what would happen if the prime minister refused to sign, he was shocked out of his wits. He said, 'But that can't happen'. Such is the power of convention­s of the British constituti­on, which, if broken, would lead to a furore in parliament.”

Convention­s are always broken. Maybe legislatio­n will help. Will the officials of the civil service and police muster enough courage to unite and demand such legislatio­n?

 ?? A.G. Noorani ??
A.G. Noorani

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India