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Opinion | Alok Verma has rekindled our sense of dharma

Alok Verma’s demand for a dignified exit, not accommodation or sops, has given our institutions an unexpected dignity.

Updated on: Jan 15, 2019 08:58 AM IST
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I do not know Alok Kumar Verma. I do not believe I have ever met the twice-removed director of our Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI). We do not have mutual friends or share relatives. Discussions of his integrity or any lack of it leave me cold because I expect officials to have integrity as much as they are supposed to have intelligence and if they are charged with a lack of integrity, again, I am not particularly affected. I know enough of governments’ ways to take accusations as reflecting anything more than whimsy, vendetta, malice and power games. Will he finally emerge unscathed from the ordeal of fire? I hope he does for I would like any official accused of wrongdoing to be able to show that she or he is innocent — not for the sake of her or his personal reputation but the sake of public confidence in the institutions of governance.

Let there be no doubt that the committee which, by an inelegant majority vote ordered Alok Verma’s (Ravi Choudhary/HT PHOTO)
Let there be no doubt that the committee which, by an inelegant majority vote ordered Alok Verma’s (Ravi Choudhary/HT PHOTO)

So this column comes from zero bias in favour of Verma or against his sackers. It comes from admiration and gratitude for his letter of January 11, 2019, addressed to the Secretary, Department of Personnel (which has been reported in the press). In that he has said, “I have served the Indian Police Service (IPS) with an unblemished record.” Now that is a highly self-confident thing to say but “unblemished record” is a standard phrase in officialise. When used by people for any particular officer, it is invariably a generous oversimplification. When used by a person about himself it is an insufferable self-indulgence. No one’s record in government service can be unblemished. It may not be blemished in terms of disciplinary proceedings initiated or punishments awarded, but is it possible for any officer who has managed large public affairs, to say he or she has done no wrong, wittingly or unwittingly, in the discharge of official duties ? Certainly not. No one is that infallible.

Second, Verma has talked of what removal means beyond what it does to him. He has talked of what is happening to institutions. And well he might, having headed — not just served in but headed — the IPS’s formations in Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Puducherry, Mizoram and Delhi, and been at the helm of Delhi’s prisons and, most famously, the CBI. He says in his letter that his removal is a pointer to how the CBI as an institution will be treated by governments hereafter. It is this part of his letter that should be, in my unsought view , his final salute. He has spoken, simply but powerfully, of how institutions are the most telling symbol of a democracy. Institutions can be slaughtered, they can be smothered, they can be subverted. He need say no more.

Let there be no doubt that the committee which, by an inelegant majority vote ordered Verma’s removal was authorised to do so. But authority is one thing, credibility is another. In exercising its power the way it has, that committee has put “power” in inverted commas. It has used the strength of its power, not its conviction. It has commanded, not convinced. Perhaps by his very misfortune, Verma may well have given our institutions a new and unexpected dignity. He may well have , by default, rekindled our sense of that oft used but indefinable word: dharma.

Gopalkrishna Gandhi is distinguished professor of history and politics, Ashoka University

The views expressed are personal

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Gopalkrishna Gandhi

Gopalkrishna Gandhi read English Literature at St Stephen’s College, Delhi. A civil servant and diplomat, he was Governor of West Bengal, 2004-2009. He is currently Distinguished Professor of History and Politics at Ashoka University

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