[Forget about the CVC, what does it say of the Hon'ble CJI' rep. in the
three-member selection committee?

The same committee will select the next CBI chief.

Highly relevant:

I. <<Justice A K Patnaik, the retired Supreme Court judge who was asked by
the apex court to supervise the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) enquiry
that eventually led to the ouster of CBI Director Alok Verma, on Friday
said there was “no evidence of corruption” against Verma, and “what the CVC
says cannot be the final word”.
***He was critical of “the very, very hasty” decision of the Prime
Minister-led selection committee to remove Verma from the CBI Director’s
post over charges of corruption and dereliction of duty (on) Thursday, two
days after he was reinstated by the Supreme Court*** [emphasis added].
Of the three members of the selection panel, Prime Minister Modi and
Justice A K Sikri were against Verma’s continuance as the CBI chief in
light of the CVC report and “the extremely serious nature of observations
made by the CVC against Verma”. Mallikarjun Kharge, Leader of Congress in
Lok Sabha, did not go with the other two members, contested the CVC report
and filed a dissent note.>>

(Ref.: 'No evidence of corruption, decision of PM-led panel on Alok Verma
very hasty: SC’s monitor' at <
https://indianexpress.com/article/india/alok-verma-cvc-panel-narendra-modi-supreme-court-5534472/?fbclid=IwAR2fnP_ShgpIuSs5wVIRbHineil89AA7zM8rQ-O5VnBuEsZri4-ajIKVSvQ
>.)

II. <<The order issued Friday by officiating CBI Director M Nageswara Rao
to reverse all decisions taken after Tuesday has negated the file signed by
then Director Alok Verma in a coal scam case, allegedly involving a senior
IAS officer.
...
***This nullified one of the files signed by Verma on Wednesday which could
have led to the chargesheeting of Bhaskar Khulbe, a West Bengal cadre IAS
officer, in a coal scam case. Currently Secretary to the Prime Minister***
[emphasis added], Khulbe is alleged to have been involved in the allotment
of coal blocks to Ramsarup Lohh Udyog Limited in the Moira-Madhujore block
of West Bengal.

(Ref.: 'CBI reverses Verma orders, negates action against IAS officer in a
coal scam case' at <
https://indianexpress.com/article/india/cbi-reverses-verma-orders-negates-action-against-ias-officer-in-a-coal-scam-case-5534483/?fbclid=IwAR1sj481DF8XtjBlKCrYqfIhDOju4UMu2-N21_2A9laYbhKo-iW34Rlo6R0
>.)

III. <<Sources close to Justice A.K. Patnaik – the retired judge tasked
with supervising the CVC’s probe against Verma – told The Wire that
Chowdary went to Verma’s residence on Janpath and made this unusual request
assuring him that “everything will be ok” for the former director if he
does that.
Details of this meeting were provided in writing by Verma to Justice
Patnaik.>>

(Excerpted from below.)

***Whether the CBI should file an FIR in the Rafale case, based on the
complaint made by Sinha, Shourie and Bhushan, was on the table.***]

https://thewire.in/government/cvc-met-alok-verma-to-request-he-withdraw-adverse-comments-on-asthana

Exclusive: CVC Met Alok Verma to Request He Withdraw Adverse Comments on
Asthana
Alok Verma reported the details of the meeting to Justice A.K. Patnaik, the
Supreme Court-appointed monitor of the CVC's probe into Asthana's
allegations against the CBI chief.

Exclusive: CVC Met Alok Verma to Request He Withdraw Adverse Comments on
Asthana
The official residence of the former CBI director, Alok Verma. The CVC,
K.V. Chowdary visited him here to intercede on behalf of Rakesh Asthana.

Rohini Singh

7 HOURS AGO

New Delhi: Central Vigilance Commissioner K.V. Chowdary asked former
Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) director Alok Verma to withdraw the
adverse comments he had made on the record in his deputy, Rakesh Asthana’s
annual confidential report, or ACR.

Sources close to Justice A.K. Patnaik – the retired judge tasked with
supervising the CVC’s probe against Verma – told The Wire that Chowdary
went to Verma’s residence on Janpath and made this unusual request assuring
him that “everything will be ok” for the former director if he does that.

Details of this meeting were provided in writing by Verma to Justice
Patnaik.

Chowdary’s request to Verma came when the fight between the two officers
had broken out in the CBI and when Verma had to take a call on making top
PMO bureaucrat Bhaskar Khulbe, an accused in the coal scam, something that
Asthana had resisted.

Significantly, in all his submissions to the Supreme Court – which finally
became the basis for the high powered committee to sack Verma as CBI
director – Chowdary made no mention of his efforts to intercede on behalf
of Asthana.

The omission is significant because the CVC’s negative report on Verma was
based entirely on inputs from Asthana.

Also read: Modi-Led Panel’s Decision to Remove Alok Verma as CBI Chief Is
Fundamentally Flawed

Justice Patnaik told the Indian Express on Saturday: “There was no evidence
against Verma regarding corruption. The entire enquiry was held on (CBI
Special Director Rakesh) Asthana’s complaint. I have said in my report that
none of the findings in the CVC’s report are mine.”

The Wire has learned that Verma made a written submission to Justice
Patnaik in which he revealed the details of this meeting. Chowdary wanted
Verma to change the conclusion he had reached in Asthana’s ACR – that he
was an officer of “doubtful integrity”. In general, adverse comments in an
officer’s ACR are an impediment for promotion and, in the case of a
sensitive post like director of the CBI, a virtually insurmountable barrier.

Alok Verma outside the CBI office. Credit: PTI

Asthana’s complaint to the CVC against Verma started after the latter’s
refusal to withdraw those adverse comments. His complaint then formed the
basis of action against Verma.

Justice Patnaik also said the decision taken by the PM-led panel to oust
Verma was “very, very hasty.”

Reached for a comment, Justice Patnaik said whatever he had to say has
already come out in the Indian Express, and that he “abides by it”.

As revealed by Justice Patnaik, the entire basis of the CVC’s report
against Verma is a complaint by Asthana, against whom six inquiries were
pending in the CBI.

Also read: Full Text | Kharge on Why Alok Verma Shouldn’t Have Been Removed
as CBI Chief

The fact that Chowdary went and met Verma on Asthana’s behalf  raises
further questions about the role of the CVC chief in the entire episode.

It is not clear who had asked the CVC to intercede on behalf of Asthana but
officials in the CBI point out how the agency’s investigation into the role
of top PMO officials had triggered anxieties in the highest levels of
government.

Chowdary did not respond to calls and texts on the matter. This story will
be updated when he chooses to respond.

His visit to Verma’s  was not the first time Chowdary had batted for
Asthana. When a controversy had broken out on the controversial officer’s
appointment as special director in the CBI and it had become clear that
Alok Verma was going to object to his selection in writing, Chowdary pushed
through Asthana’s appointment. Officials say that top PMO bureaucrat P.K.
Mishra had summoned the Central Vigilance Chowdary, and directed him to
ensure Asthana was appointed.

Later, in October 2018, when the CBI registered an FIR against Asthana, the
CVC raised procedural objections. According to the Economic Times, Chowdary
said that “prior sanction from the  “competent authority” under Section
17-A [of the Prevention of Corruption Act] should be taken if the agency
were to initiate any inquiry against Asthana. Yet, no prior sanction was
taken by the agency and that “Section 13 (1) (d) of the Prevention of
Corruption Act under which Asthana has been booked was removed through an
amendment in July.”

Lawyers say both arguments hold no water.

Chowdary’s report formed the basis of Verma’s removal as the CBI chief by a
committee comprising of Prime Minister Modi, Congress leader Mallikarjun
Kharge and Justice A.K. Sikri.

Also read: All You Need to Know About the CBI Tussle, Through The Wire’s
Coverage

Though Justice Patnaik had clearly recorded that he did not share
findings/conclusions in the CVC report against Verma, Kharge was the only
member of the committee to contest the report and file a dissent note. Mdi
and Sikri overruled him and decided that  the CVC report and the “extremely
serious nature of observations  made by [it] against Verma,” to remove him
as director.

Verma, in his resignation letter sent sent on January 11, said that the
selection committee had not provided him the opportunity to explain his
side of the story. “Natural justice was scuttled and the entire process was
turned upside down in ensuring that the undersigned is removed from the
post of Director CBI,” Verma wrote. He also pointed out how the CVC only
forwarded a signed statement of Asthana and how the complainant had never
come before Justice Patnaik.

The CVC himself  is seen as an officer mired in controversy. His name had
surfaced in the former CBI chief Ranjit Sinha’s visitors diary scandal.
Chowdary, after being appointed CVC, was also spotted in the office of
Nikhil Merchant, a businessman believed to be close to the prime minister.

A PIL against his appointment was filed in the Supreme Court by the NGO
Common Cause, which questioned his fitness for the anti-corruption job
given his earlier reluctance, as a top income-tax official, to investigate
the contents of incriminating documents recovered by his department from
the corporate offices of the Birla and Sahara group. Those documents spoke
of payments to various individuals or entities, including ‘Guj CM’.

You can read The Wire‘s complete coverage of the CBI conflict here.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to greenyouth+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send an email to greenyouth@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to