“An honest civil servant should not be
harassed by anybody or agency or institution while in service or after
retirement. It would make the civil servants working in the system nervous and
edgy, which would not be in the interest of the country,” Sanjay Bhoosreddy,
Honorary Secretary of the Central IAS Officers Association has said.
Ponderous(burdensome,कष्टकारक) words indeed in the context of former Union
Coal Secretary H.C. Gupta, who is facing trial in several Coalgate cases,
choosing not to have any lawyer to defend him. Mr. Gupta told the trial judge
recently that he did not have the money to hire a lawyer. He also turned down
an offer of state aid made by the judge. In all likelihood, he will argue his
own case. This is an extraordinary decision that could prove to be a
double-edged weapon. The skill required to defend an accused in a criminal case
is a specialised one. In my view, Mr. Gupta is taking too big a chance out of
desperation and disgust at the way things are taking shape around him.
Appeal to good senses
Mr. Gupta is obviously outraged(angry,गुस्सा) at the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) action. He probably understands that the law on the subject is against him, and he would therefore appeal directly to the good senses of the judge, something bordering on an attempt to play on emotions. Not for him the technicalities of what he is accused of. In his own eyes, he has done nothing wrong, and cannot be placed in the company of the corrupt and wily. He is only partly right.
Mr. Gupta is obviously outraged(angry,गुस्सा) at the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) action. He probably understands that the law on the subject is against him, and he would therefore appeal directly to the good senses of the judge, something bordering on an attempt to play on emotions. Not for him the technicalities of what he is accused of. In his own eyes, he has done nothing wrong, and cannot be placed in the company of the corrupt and wily. He is only partly right.
Many in
government and outside may dismiss him as a maverick(unorthodox,अपरंपरागत). From whatever I have heard of him, Mr. Gupta
was an outstanding officer with a reputation for integrity. Remember also that
the formal charge sheet against him by the CBI do not allege that he ever
obtained any gratification for showing favour to the private companies that had
received licences to operate a few coal mines. The charge sheet indicts him
only as part of a ‘conspiracy’ to confer undue favour on private parties, and
which caused loss to the public exchequer. This implied that he was negligent(careless,लापरवाह), and there was no application of mind on his
part when the screening committee headed by him decided to examine the licence
applications in question. There is no recorded evidence, however, that he
dissented(disagreement,असहमति) from the
majority opinion which favoured the grant of licences to some firms.
The
conclusions of his committee were purely recommendatory in nature. That the
final authority here was the Coal Minister, who, at that point of time, was
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, and that he was not prosecuted by the
investigating agency, is not very relevant to Mr. Gupta’s defence — although
the CBI decision, possibly backed by legal opinion, smacked of double
standards. Remember, in Bofors, Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi figured
posthumously in the charge sheet as ‘accused not sent for trial’ only because
he held charge of Defence. There was no charge that Bofors made any payment to
him. Interestingly, what many of us would look upon as a moral or constructive
civil liability comes to be defined as ‘criminal misconduct’ under the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, which was enacted to lend more deterrence(obstacle,अवरोध) to what
was being considered for long as a weak and toothless — the 1947 law against
public servant corruption.
Element of ‘abuse of office’
Several judgments over the years had exposed the lacunae(lack,खामिया) in the 1947 Act, which enabled the corrupt to get off scot-free on being given a benefit of the doubt. Significant was the Supreme Court observation inM. Narayanan Nambiar v. State of Kerala, that under Section 5(1) (d) of the 1947 Act, an element of abuse of office was a necessary ingredient while trying to establish that a public servant used corrupt or illegal means to obtain pecuniary(financial,धन संबंधी) benefits. And ‘abuse of office’ was too vague(unclear,अस्पस्थ) an expression that let many corrupt officers off the hook. In several other judgments on the subject, courts had narrowed down the circumstances under which a public servant could be prosecuted for corruption. This is the background to the promulgation of the 1988 Act, which, under Section 13(1) (d), laid down five forms of criminal misconduct by a public servant. Finding that some officers were giving in too easily to corrupt demands from above — and did not do anything to resist such demands under the belief that as long as they were not beneficiaries, no criminal liability was liable to be attached to them — the government decided that such kind of abetment(incite,उकसाना) of graft in high places had to be penalised. This accounts specifically for Section 13(1) (d) (iii), according to which, a public servant commits the offence of criminal misconduct if he, “while holding office as a public servant, obtains for any person any valuable thing or pecuniary advantage without any public interest”.
Several judgments over the years had exposed the lacunae(lack,खामिया) in the 1947 Act, which enabled the corrupt to get off scot-free on being given a benefit of the doubt. Significant was the Supreme Court observation inM. Narayanan Nambiar v. State of Kerala, that under Section 5(1) (d) of the 1947 Act, an element of abuse of office was a necessary ingredient while trying to establish that a public servant used corrupt or illegal means to obtain pecuniary(financial,धन संबंधी) benefits. And ‘abuse of office’ was too vague(unclear,अस्पस्थ) an expression that let many corrupt officers off the hook. In several other judgments on the subject, courts had narrowed down the circumstances under which a public servant could be prosecuted for corruption. This is the background to the promulgation of the 1988 Act, which, under Section 13(1) (d), laid down five forms of criminal misconduct by a public servant. Finding that some officers were giving in too easily to corrupt demands from above — and did not do anything to resist such demands under the belief that as long as they were not beneficiaries, no criminal liability was liable to be attached to them — the government decided that such kind of abetment(incite,उकसाना) of graft in high places had to be penalised. This accounts specifically for Section 13(1) (d) (iii), according to which, a public servant commits the offence of criminal misconduct if he, “while holding office as a public servant, obtains for any person any valuable thing or pecuniary advantage without any public interest”.
The tirade
of the IAS and several senior servants belonging to other superior services
against Section 13(1) (d) (iii) is on the ground that the burden of proof in
criminal cases, which normally rests with the prosecution, shifts here to the
public servant arraigned by law, and the latter had to prove to the
satisfaction of the court that he did not at all benefit from the transaction
under probe. This incidentally is germane(relevant,सार्थक) to the defence of H.C. Gupta. This
criticism is not true, although on a superficial(external,सतही) reading it appears as if
the prosecution had no responsibility at all to establish the guilt of an
accused.
Several
decisions related to the 1947 Act and expert views on the 1988 Act clarify that
court presumption of any accused’s guilt contemplated here is not automatic.
Such presumption follows only after the prosecution had done its duty of
presenting evidence that the accused had “obtained or (has) agreed to obtain
for himself or for any other person gratification (other than legal
remuneration)”. Also, Section 20 of the 1988 Act, which deals with the
circumstances under which a court can raise a presumption against an accused is
specific to habitual offenders and not to others. Besides, the presumption is
one of law and not facts. These interpretations alone should allay(reduce,कम) the misgivings and fears of an honest civil
servant that he would be hauled up for transparent decisions which stand the
risk of going wrong and causing loss to the exchequer.
Amendment before Parliament
An amendment to the PC Act of 1988 is before a select committee in Parliament. It deals with Section 13(1) (d). It is just possible that this subsection may be eventually substantially diluted or wholly deleted. If this happens, the logical question would be one of how to introduce deterrence against a civil servant who, though honest, would like to just drift and permit himself to cave in against a dishonest Minister. This is a serious issue that negates(invalidate,नकारना) the basic concept of civil service accountability. This would actually promote the tendency of the executive to choose weak civil servants who may be personally honest but are known to be extremely timid(afraid,डरा हुआ), and from whom no resistance at all to dishonest decisions could be expected. The malady(illness,रोग) is particularly prevalent(popular,प्रचलित) in some States where dishonesty is the order of the day.
An amendment to the PC Act of 1988 is before a select committee in Parliament. It deals with Section 13(1) (d). It is just possible that this subsection may be eventually substantially diluted or wholly deleted. If this happens, the logical question would be one of how to introduce deterrence against a civil servant who, though honest, would like to just drift and permit himself to cave in against a dishonest Minister. This is a serious issue that negates(invalidate,नकारना) the basic concept of civil service accountability. This would actually promote the tendency of the executive to choose weak civil servants who may be personally honest but are known to be extremely timid(afraid,डरा हुआ), and from whom no resistance at all to dishonest decisions could be expected. The malady(illness,रोग) is particularly prevalent(popular,प्रचलित) in some States where dishonesty is the order of the day.
The
popular impression now is that in our country there is no fear of the
anti-corruption law on the part of government officials. When this is the hard
reality on the ground, concerned citizens would do well to collectively protest
against any dilution of anti-corruption safeguards as the proposed amendment
seeks to do.
A final
word. What is the IAS Officers Association doing to promote integrity among its
members? I would like to ask the same question of those holding positions in
other associations, such as those for the IPS and IFS. Such groups cannot be
mere trade unions fighting for rights. Their obligations include a stout(strong,मजबूत) advocacy of adherence by their members to ethics while serving
the public. Whatever I hear on the subject may not however be music to the ears
of those who currently stand for probity.
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