He may have left behind a mixed legacy at Air India, but Ashwini Lohani is clearly a babu in demand. After being at the helm of the troubled carrier twice, and been Chairman of the Railway Board, among his other accomplishments, some thought that Lohani’s successful run as a bureaucrat was over.
But the Jagan Reddy government in Andhra Pradesh has now appointed his as chairman of the Andhra Pradesh Tourism Development Corporation, with the rank of a Cabinet minister.
But it is Lohani’s stints at Air India that brought him most notice, especially since he had no previous background in aviation, having been an officer of the Indian Railway Service of Mechanical Engineers.
At Air India, he soothed ruffled feathers of disgruntled employees, and expanded and repositioned the airline. His legacy would have endured had he stayed on to oversee its privatisation and ensured a smooth transition.
But clearly, his administrative skills have also endeared him to AP Chief Minister Jagan Mohan Reddy. He is expected to harness the tourism potential of the state. He also happens to be the second former babu brought in from Delhi to the state, after former finance secretary Subhash Chandra Garg. Of course this is a matter of consternation to those ruling the roost locally.
Mysterious decline
The appointment of IAS, IPS and other Group A services officers through promotions declined by 50 per cent between 2016 and 2018. A Lok Sabha query revealed that the number of appointments through promotion was 2,918 in 2018. Comparably, it was 5,953 in 2016 and 5,944 in 2017.
However, no one seems to know the reason behind this drastic dip in promotions. According to sources, Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) officials say that the reduction could be the result of ongoing court cases, fewer retirements, and so on, but these reasons do not explain the 50 per cent decline in promotions. Especially when we consider another fact: There is a massive number of vacancies at the Centre.
One reason for this, it is being said, is that promotions from deputy secretary level to secretary level are made by committees and selection panels. If there are delays in meetings of these committees, obviously no promotion can be made. Whatever, it is indeed a confusing situation
Reckless behaviour
Bureaucrats, by definition, are meant to follow rules and make others follow them too. But not here, not even when the entire country is locked down and is making a valiant effort to fight the CoVID-19 outbreak which is spreading and has claimed several lives. While the government is strictly enforcing quarantine, social distancing and other methods to check the spread of the epidemic, some babus are still bending the rules to accommodate the wishes of some “VIPs” and their ilk.
Those in know cite the recent example of a big business family in Mumbai who arrived at the airport from the UK, were received at the tarmac and promptly whisked away to their home forgoing the mandatory routine for all passengers who arrive in the country from abroad. Then a relative of a former minister was seen meeting a foreign emissary at the airport, flouting all rules.
But in terms of sheer callousness and stupidity of the officialdom, this one takes the cake: West Bengal’s first confirmed case of CoVID-19 has forced senior officials to go into self-quarantine. Apparently, the son of a senior official in the state home department returned from London, but the youth’s mother, a West Bengal Civil Service officer promoted to the Indian Administrative Service, still chose to attend office, met top officials, and attended meetings, while her son didn’t appear for tests, and rather chose to skip them until much later, when the suspicion was confirmed.
This reckless behaviour has now placed top bureaucrats — including the director-general of police, the home secretary, and some other senior IPS and IAS officers — in isolation, at a time when all hands are required on the deck to fight the virus that threatens us all.
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