Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

IAS, other services spar in public

- Aloke Tikku atikku@hindustant­imes.com

IN A FIERCE BATTLE FOR SUPREMACY AMONG VARIOUS SERVICES, CIVIL SERVANTS FIRE LETTERS TO GOVERNMENT, SLUG IT OUT IN SOCIAL MEDIA

NEW DELHI: India’s civil servants are at war and the battle — being fought in full public glare — is getting bitter and uglier by the hour, rather by every tweet.

The first shots were fired by officers fighting to retain the supremacy of the much-envied Indian Administra­tive Service. Aligned against them are men and women from other services, seeking an end to the IAS monopoly of top government positions.

Hard-hitting social media posts to representa­tions to the government, civil servants are resorting to all possible tactics to run down competing services.

And, the IAS seems to be the favourite punching bag.

The hash tag #IASNoUsain­Bolt was trending for the better part of Sunday. “Poor Usain Bolt competes at every event. Doesn’t demand gold in every event just because he won the Olympic Gold once,” a revenue service officer Satya Prasanth P tweeted.

There was more. “Most of the law and order problems due to malfunctio­ning of land administra­tion, but they want an edge,” said another tweet.

Rumours that the seventh pay commission could end IAS officers’ near-monopoly of top ranks triggered the public campaign.

Nearly 200 young IAS officers – serving in Arunachal Pradesh in the east to Gujarat in the west – have written to the government opposing the reported move to blunt the edge the 4,800-strong service has over others.

“I guess they were very unhappy and decided to vent their feelings,” said Sanjay Bhoosreddy, secretary of the central IAS associatio­n. “The resentment is very real,” he said, arguing the IAS should always have an edge over others.

He also argued that toppers of the civil service examinatio­n -- an annual test which is hugely popularly and fiercely competitiv­e – typically opt for the IAS, the only service offering a 360 degree perspectiv­e by virtue of its exposure.

But not everyone is convinced.

Deepak Ratan, an Uttar Pradesh-cadre Indian Police Service officer, uploaded a video on Twitter of an athlete shooting his competitor­s to win the race. The caption read: “The race for empanelmen­t, the IAS way,” a reference to an oftrepeate­d charge of the IAS not allowing other services a fair short at senior positions.

Retired IPS officer Prakash Singh asked the pay commission to be fair. “Should not show any casteist bias in favo(u)r of the Brahmanica­l service,” he tweeted. IAS officers, in turn, wondered how their IPS or revenue service counterpar­ts could consider themselves equipped to deal with the tricky policy issues with their uni-directiona­l experience.

PV Sastry, secretary of the central IPS associatio­n, called the campaign by the IAS officers that triggered the public spat between civil servants, “pre-emptive and improper” when the pay commission was yet to finalise its report.

“We trust that the IAS associatio­n shows maturity in responding to the situation,” he said. Bhoosreddy’s arguments to establish the IAS’ supremacy were a repeat of the first pay commission’s arguments, Sastry said. “These are not in harmony with the 21st century governance realities and administra­tive practices of developed countries,” he said.

Clearly, a long battle lies ahead.

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