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Tale of two IITians

Two IITians hogged the limelight in Chandigarh this week for opposite reasons: one, an IAS officer, for brave, single-handed fight against the shady land deals of the country's most powerful, and another for being the youngest IPS officer probably to have been apprehended by the central bureau of investigation (CBI) on bribe charge. Rajesh Moudgil writes

Updated on: Oct 22, 2012 10:25 AM IST
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Two IITians hogged the limelight in Chandigarh this week for opposite reasons: one, an IAS officer, for brave, single-handed fight against the shady land deals of the country's most powerful, and another for being the youngest IPS officer probably to have been apprehended by the central bureau of investigation (CBI) on bribe charge.

HT Image
HT Image


No prizes for identifying them. Ashok Khemka, from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kharagpur (West Bengal), is the 1991-batch Haryana-cadre Indian administrative service (IAS) officer who hit the headlines for taking on Robert Vadra, son-in-law of Congress president Sonia Gandhi, and DLF, country's leading realty giant. The other IITian is Chandigarh's superintendent of police (city), Deshraj Singh, accused of accepting Rs 1 lakh as bribe from a subordinate officer.

Deshraj, 33, the 2008-batch Indian police service (IPS) officer, is known for keeping a flamboyant lifestyle in his below-two-year stint in Chandigarh, and Khemka for his frugal living and being shunted 41 times in his 20 years of service. Deshraj, who received the MTech degree from IIT, Kanpur (Uttar Pradesh), was assistant engineer in a software company and assistant garrison engineer in the military engineering service (MES), ministry of defence, before joining the police. Khemka, computer science graduate from IIT-Kharagpur and holder of doctorate degree in the subject from the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, also has a business administration (MBA) degree.

This article is to cast no aspersion on the quality education in the IITs that remain the real temples probably of education with scholarly faculties and honest learners, save exceptions.

The writer can be contacted @rajesh.moudgil@hindustantimes.com

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rajesh Moudgil

Rajesh Moudgil is a Special Correspondent in Haryana bureau of Hindustan Times.

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