Political Diary
New Delhi, 22 November 2014
CBI Chief In The
Dock
SAVE THE
CAGEDPARROT
By Poonam I Kaushish
What is it about the Central
Bureau of Investigation (CBI) that has it always in the limelight? That too for
all the wrong reasons. Earning it the nickname Central Bureau of Corruption,
Connivance and Convenience. With the devil taking the hindmost!
But this time round, its
Director Ranjit Sinha is scurrying for cover. In the dock for cover-ups and
clean chits in the Rs 1.76 lakh crores 2G spectrum scam case. Indeed he has
come a long way from being called the Government’s “caged parrot” last year in
Coalgate to having harsh strictures passed against him today.
In an extraordinary and
unprecedented order in the 2G investigations last week the Supreme
Court severely indicted Sinha for “influencing, interfering, tampering and
protecting some accused” in the probe after it found allegations against him
appeared to be “prima facie credible”. Alongside, it ordered him to rescue
himself from the case.
Specially against the backdrop
of recent visits
by some dubious individuals and 2G accused to Sinha’s residence. Interestingly,
the frequency with which they called increased as investigations against those
indicted or their associates picked up speed. “How seriously should we take the
case made out by the agency?” questioned the Bench.
Sinha stands guilty of
reportedly transferring an officer who disagreed with vis-à-vis the case. The three Judges Bench wondered whether the
“Chief wanted to have a clear path where no one will oppose you. Are you not
trying to overreach the Court?” queried Chief Justice Dattu as it went against
the spirit of their order not to meddle till the probe was complete.
Adding to the Director’s woes, the Bench
criticized Sinha’s conduct in referring the
Aircel-Maxis case relating to former UPA Telecom Minister Dayanidhi Maran to
the then Attorney General, simply a “waste of precious time.” Worse, the
verdict could also portend trouble for Sinha in the
Rs 1.86 lakh crores coal block allocation case.
Alas, instead of admitting his
fault Sinha is busy brazening out and vilifying some of his officers for acting
as “moles” of the petitioner by supplying 2G scam documents and victimizing
them. Thereby, tarnishing the entire organization. Could the CBI’s
image be besmirched any further?
The issue is not
whether Sinha resigns or not prior to his retirement on 2 December, he should
given the strong indictment from the Apex
Court in the 2G case, but why the CBI’s credibility has suffered so greatly?
Sadly, successive Governments have used it as
a hand maiden to dance to its tune. A toothless tiger to help friends settle
political scores with opponents. Thereby, raising serious doubts about its
honesty and integrity of purpose to weed out the corrupt. Consequently, the
system becomes self-perpetuating whereby a threatened political elite have
given more and more powers to the CBI to get their way and have their say.
Arguably, is the CBI more sinned against than
sinning? Is the pot calling the kettle
black? The truth is mid-way. Both work in tandem in furthering their own
interest. The CBI too has adopted a brazenly opportunistic policy of
playing safe with Governments of the day and its willingness and commitment to
serve their mai baaps interest for
post retirement lollipops.
It
remains to be seen whether Sinha’s misdemeanors would cast a shadow on the
renewed debate on the CBI independence, autonomy and its accountability. What
should be the balance between the two? Along-with the terms of Executive
management or control? How do we enable the agency to perform its functions with speed
and prudence?
Clearly, the great disservice Sinha has done
to his institution is to let his own questionable record cloud the important
long-term issues at stake. Recall, repeated castigations by various
Courts in different cases over the agency’s lethargy in conducting
investigations makes it imperative that the Lokpal Bill which brings the CBI
under the Lokpal’s ambit to ensure its autonomous functioning be brought
forthwith in the ongoing winter session of Parliament.
Prime Minister Modi has
oft spoken about ushering in transparency in governance. It is high time the
CBI is truly independent, stops being His
Masters Voice and prevents abuse of power. Undoubtedly this would be a
formidable task given that the agency needs purging of “yes men” and cleansed
of backdoor instructions. There is no point in
initiating a biased investigation which does not guarantee a fair probe.
Undeniably, future CBI Chief’s have an arduous task ahead of cleansing the grimy stables. They would
need to behave more responsibly
leaving no room for suspicion sending a message that CBI's credibility is
supreme. Asserted an officer, “We now would have to reopen case files again as
many of Sinha’s decisions were questionable. In addition, these could end up
being challenged in courts.” Besides, not a few accused who did not visit
Sinha’s home might approach courts stating they were unnecessarily being
harassed.
Pertinently, a Parliamentary Standing Committee report on
the “Working of the CBI” in 2011, which continues to gather dust, recommended
it be made an ``enforcement agency” and be given “independent and autonomous’’
status to prevent political interference in its functioning.
It also mooted it be granted power to investigate and
prosecute through a separate statute called the Central Bureau of Intelligence
and Investigation Act. And given the same status as the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) in the US
to allow it to independently take up cases of high-tech crime.
In all
western democracies, investigative agencies have undergone huge and numerous
makeovers and evolved over a period of time. Therefore, we need simply to set
CBI free.
Predictably, anathema to our Right Honourables who candidly
confess that granting sanction for prosecution was one of the “bottlenecks” in
giving the CBI autonomy. Brazenly, there are umpteen instances where
prosecution sanction was denied underscoring that the premier investigative
agency requires a drastic clean-up.
Will Modi seize the moment? Surprise and
silence his rivals by introducing the long awaited Lokpal Bill and placing CBI
under Lokpal oversight in the current winter session of parliament.
What next? The time has come to make the investigation body
a top-class outfit. Our leaders have to desist from subjecting the CBI to
bureaucratic prescriptions of effecting economy in administration. India needs a
sleek CBI that acts without favours and prejudice.
As the NDA Government selects the new CBI Director it needs
to make sure the person is truly above board known for his honesty, expertise,
integrity, competence and commitment. He should have no political affiliations,
lest he be dubbed the Prime Minister’s hatchet man. His impeccable record would
go a long way in establishing the credibility down the rank and file and
guarantee an unbiased assessment of all cases.
Thereby bringing in the much-needed accountability to inspire confidence
among a disgusted public.
At the end of the day, the powers-that-be must desist from
playing havoc with the CBI. They need to answer two pointed questions: Will the
CBI be guided by the law of the land only or by the Government of the day?
Questionably, who will cast the first stone?
Kiski laathi aur kiski bhains? ----
INFA
(Copyright,
India News and Feature Alliance)
|