Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Let’s do the right thing by CBI

The SC judgment is a good starting point to remake CBI

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The Supreme Court’s order, in what is now popularly called the CBI vs CBI case, has reinforced the importance of following due process, especially in matters concerning the operation and oversight of key institutio­ns. In that aspect, it is definitely a setback for the government no matter how the latter may seek to spin the verdict. The court said the government should have referred the matter of CBI chief Alok Verma’s removal to the select committee, the same panel that chooses the CBI chief — instead of just asking the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) to divest him of his powers. The court’s message is clear: in a parliament­ary democracy, the executive does not have unrestrain­ed powers to infringe on the rights and autonomy of institutio­ns. In the CBI’s case, the law was clear that the chief of the agency would have a fixed term, be chosen by a select committee and, it is clear now after the ruling, be removed, if required, by it.

It isn’t a complete victory for CBI chief Alok Verma, though. By asking for the select panel to look into the charges against him — some of the findings of the CVC’s report on these were pretty serious, the court remarked while hearing the case — the SC has acknowledg­ed that these need further investigat­ion. Its decision to not reinstate Mr Verma with all powers is therefore recognitio­n of both the nature of these charges as well as the CVC’s superinten­dence on such matters over the agency. Mr Verma may well start his fresh stint at the CBI by scrapping the transfer of the officers he had investigat­ing his deputy Rakesh Asthana, but the select committee will now look into the charges against him, perhaps go over the same CVC report.

The court’s order has given everyone an opportunit­y to do the right thing by an agency that has lost face and credibilit­y. Part of this is because of the CBI’s own overt politicisa­tion, although the agency has always been politicise­d. Some of it also has to do with the way the agency’s top officials, and, by extension, the agency itself, have behaved. This judgment is a good starting point to remake the CBI. After all, the last big wave of reforms in the agency happened in the wake of and as a result of the Vineet Narain vs Union of India case. Whether this much-needed makeover will happen, and the contours of it, depend on the government and the CBI itself.

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