Monday, June 7, 2021

India helps Maldives foreign minister get UN General Assembly Presidentship: ::: Alapan's offence does not end with 'retirement'

India helps Maldives foreign minister get UN General Assembly Presidentship



New Delhi: Foreign Minister of Maldives, Abdullah Shahid, has been elected as the President of the 76th United Nations General Assembly with an overwhelming majority. 

This is a post held on an annual basis, rotated amongst various regional groupings. 

The 76th session (2021-22) is the turn of the Asia-Pacific group.  This is the first time Maldives will be occupying the high office. Afghanistan was also eyeing the post.

"Heartiest felicitations to Foreign Minister of Maldives Abdullah Shahid on his election as President for 76th UN General Assembly," tweeted External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar.


"This is a testimony as much to his own stature as to the standing of Maldives. We look forward to working with him to strengthen multilateralism and its much needed reforms," he further wrote.

"A friend of India on @UN pedestal. Congratulations to Foreign Minister Abdullah Shahid of Maldives on  his election as President of 76th UN General Assembly," tweeted Syed Akbaruddin, former diplomat who also served as India's Permanent Representative at the UN.

Meanwhile, sources said here that while Maldives had announced FM Shahid’s candidature in December 2018 India announced its support for Mr Shahid during the visit of Foreign Secretary Harsh V Shringla to Maldives in November 2020. 


In mid-January 2021, in a surprising development and with less than 6 months before the elections, Afghan Foreign Minister Zalmai Rassoul entered the fray. 


Maldives has never held the office of PGA, while Afghanistan has held this post during the 21st session in 1966-67.


"Both Maldives and Afghanistan have excellent relations with India, and both candidates are friends of India. 

However, since India had already committed its support to Maldives at a time when no other candidate was in the fray, India voted in favour of Maldives," sources told this scribe.

The office of the President of the general assembly is the highest office in the UN System, and reflects the collective goodwill of the 193 Member States of the UN. 



India remains committed to supporting the office of the President of the General Assembly as it has consistently done 

in previous years, sources said. 


ends 


Alapan Bandyopadhyay's offence does not end with 'retirement', actions can be taken within four years


New Delhi:
A battery of former IAS officers has flayed the conduct of former West Bengal Chief Secretary Alapan Bandyopdhyay.


Writing on the row, Dr C V Ananda Bose, a former Kerala Chief Secretary, says, "Alapan Bandyopadhyay, placed himself in the dock. He has realised at a heavy price that the civil service cannot hunt with the hound and run with the hare".
Writing for 'New Indian Express', he further says, "A noteworthy aspect is that resignation from service or retirement does not absolve an All India Service officer of his responsibility under the conduct rules. 


Disciplinary action can be taken against him during the four years following his retirement".


Arguments have been built up about what was his offence when he only said 'yes' to the Chief Minister (his immediate boss). Well, the truth of the matter is a Chief Secretary cannot pretend to be someone who is a personal staff of the Chief Minister.

"The ex-Chief Secretary (Bandyopadhyay) was hand-in-glove with the Chief Minister (Mamata Banerjee) in the execution of her political agenda which seeks to deface and defile federal sanctity and propriety," says Bose.


Sharing similar sentiment, a serving civil servant Dr Srivatsa Krishna says rather caustically in his piece for cnbctv18.com: "Everything that is legal may not be proper. It is very improper of a CS to boycott a meeting called by the Prime Minister, even if it was not under the Disaster Management Act. He is an IAS officer, not a West Bengal civil service officer- all the privileges that come with being an IAS also come with certain responsibilities". 


Thus, he says, Bandyopadhyay's "conduct, of boycotting an official meeting of the PM that too on cyclone relief, was clearly unbecoming of an IAS officer serving as the head of the state administration".


He further says, "Rule 51B of the Disaster Management Act, supersedes the Conduct Rules, and it is well known that violation invites prosecution and even jail. Thus, the valid question to ask is, should the chief secretary of a state violate the constitutional propriety and protocol while dealing with the Prime Minister, even if his political boss chooses to do so? The answer is an emphatic no".

Meanwhile, other aspects of his career are also coming to light. 


One thing that strikes significantly is that Bandyopdhyay never served outside West Bengal - forget about central deputation.

In fact, even his successor Hari Krishna Dwivedi, who is a 1988 batch officer, too, has not served on a Central deputation in his 33-year-career.

The central deputation actually gives the much necessary 'exposure' and 'flexibility' to work for the steel frame.

In fact, many serving and retired officials agree that 'managing contradictions including political contradictions' is part of the job of a civil servant and more so for an officer with three-decade of experience and heading the IAS team as the Chief Secretary.


Observers say the entire Kalaikunda saga only exposes his 'inefficiency'. As the trusted top babu of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, the onus was on Bandyopadhyay to explain the 'sensitivity' involved to the Chief Minister as the meeting was for a review for central assistance. Instead he chose to be a participant in Mamata's orchestrated plans to hurl insult at Narendra Modi.

At any cost, central assistance is vital to get the relief funds to help the people. 
Thus, Alapan’s actions — "advertent or inadvertent" as argues one officer does tantamount to a professional insult  to the incumbent Prime Minister in office. Even protocol wise, a Prime Minister is superior to a Chief Minister.


The complexities are well explained by C V Ananda Bose. "Does it augur well for the service that a top bureaucrat who should have implemented the Disaster Management Act emerged as the disaster himself," he wonders. 

In his piece for 'MoneyControl.com', P K Basu, a former Union Agriculture Secretary, sums up some of the paradoxes well.

"Unfortunately, over the years, some officers started adjusting to the new normal and became yes-men/women. They forgot the oath of allegiance to the Constitution. They forgot the fact that they only had one boss: the Constitution of India — and not a Chief Minister. Politicians won over such officers by playing on their greed: a lucrative posting, a foreign jaunt, cheap land or house, post-retirement perks, etc." 


Can he clean up the mess ?


ends 


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