MAHARASHTRA
People Have Their SayPublic support
forces the reinstatement of the Pune civic chief as the Government readies to fight the
court order.
By Sheela
Raval
The
Maharashtra Government received an unwelcome order from the Bombay High Court last week.
It not only quashed the Government's transfer of controversial Pune Municipal Commissioner
Arun Bhatia to the state Archives Department as director but also directed it to reinstate
him in the original post. Worse, when the state moved the Supreme Court, its appeal for a
stay on the high court order was outright rejected.
If Bhatia's resuming charge was bad news for the Government,
the good news, as the people of Pune saw it, was that their efforts towards this end had
succeeded. Two separate public-interest petitions filed by the citizens in the high court
had maintained that the Government had unfairly transferred the municipal commissioner
because he had trod on the toes of the rich and mighty by ordering the demolition of
unauthorised structures belonging to them on Pune's arterial roads. "It is a victory
for honesty and it has raised hopes for the public in seeking justice if such incidents
are repeated in future," says Sunanda Das of the Pune Citizens' Forum, one of the
petitioners.
GROUNDS
FOR RECALL |
According to the division
bench of the Bombay High Court:
» It is difficult to accept
state's claim that there's no nexus between demolitions and transfer.
» The state's reasoning that Bhatia's presence in Pune hindered
inquiry defies logic.
» It is uncharitable to assume under the circumstances that press
reports were not correct. |
Giving its judgement on the petitions filed by Das,
four others and Pune corporator Nitin Jagtap, the division bench comprising Chief Justice
Y.K. Sabharwal and Justice S. Radhakrishnan said the reasons for the transfer cited in the
affidavit of Chief Minister Narayan Rane were not acceptable. Rane had justified Bhatia's
transfer by saying some of the structures demolished by him were either protected by court
or the Urban Development Department. He had also said the transfer was the result of
confidential correspondence between Bhatia and state Chief Secretary P. Subramanium being
leaked to the press and that Bhatia's presence in Pune during an inquiry would have an
adverse effect on the municipal corporation's functioning.
But the division bench maintained that it was difficult to
establish that there was no nexus between the transfer and the demolitions. At the same
time, it observed that the Government was free to take action if it could establish that
Bhatia had leaked confidential information.
Determined to fight back, the Government is setting up an
inquiry and plans to take disciplinary action against Bhatia on charges like indiscipline
and breach of confidentiality as well as divulging critical and internal information to
the public under the special All India Service Rules.
Reacting to the court's judgement, Subramanium said, "If
everybody starts speaking their mind and moves court, the administrative system will
collapse and the basic fabric of discipline will be torn." Accusing Bhatia of
exceeding his brief, he added, "Such an officer certainly poses a great danger to the
administrative machinery".
Even after the high court issued its order, jubilant Puneites
waited for Bhatia to resume office before they could celebrate. In the light of the
Government's adamant stand before the Supreme Court rejected its appeal, they had even
threatened to intensify their campaign and launch a statewide agitation. Over 175
organisations had come under the umbrella of the Pune Kriti Samati in support of Bhatia.
Overwhelmed by the massive public support and the court
orders, Bhatia says justice has been done. "After 30 years of service and 24 transfer
orders, my hopes have been revived," he adds, determined to continue with his
demolition drive in Pune.
In the absence of a clear transfer policy, the issue of
shunting out Bhatia has become a highly politicised issue. The case has raised questions
about power being exercised arbitrarily by the authorities in the matter of transfers.
Some bureaucrats, however, feel the issue is being
"unnecessarily stretched" and has now become a prestige matter for the state
Government and the chief secretary. Use of phrases like "administrative
reasons", or "prerogative of executives and politicians in power", which
provide much scope for injustice, can be easily challenged in the court of law. While the
basic issue of checks and balances in routine bureaucratic functioning is undergoing a
mass debate, the battle clearly has not ended. It is now the will of the people against
the will of vested interests. |