THE HINDU Today's Paper
» NATIONAL NEW DELHI,
August 30, 2013
Top contenders out of race for Rail Board chief
A peculiar situation has arisen at Rail Bhawan. All nine
top contenders have been eliminated from the race for Chairman of the
Railway Board for one reason or the other in just four months.
The
latest to go is acting Chairman Arunendra Kumar, whose name the Central
Vigilance Commission (CVC) has not recommended for regularisation, even
as the Rail Bhawan corridors were abuzz with the doings and undoings in
the higher echelons of the Railway Ministry after North Frontier
Railway General Manager R.S. Virdi was eased out of the race.
Highly
placed sources said the CVC had recommended the names of only Kolkata
Metro General Manager Radhey Shyam, who is also in charge of South
Eastern Railway, and South Western Railway General Manager A.K. Mittal
for the top post. The CVC recommended a CBI probe against the acting
Chairman.
Mr. A.K. Mittal, however, faces a problem:
the outgoing Chairman, Vinay Mittal, issued a confidential letter, in
which he said his performance was not up to the mark.
The
first to get eliminated was the Member (Staff), Mahesh Kumar, after his
arrest in a bribery scam. The Member (Electrical), Kul Bhushan, the
senior-most member of the Board, was named in a preliminary inquiry by
the CBI.
Northern Railway General Manager V.K. Gupta,
too, is no more in the reckoning as his name figures in the
conversations taped by the CBI in the bribery case. He is facing other
charges also.
Three others do not fulfil the criteria
prescribed for the post: completion of one year as zonal general
manager and two years of residual service. As a matter of fact, Mr.
Virdi was on the top of the list, fulfilling these criteria, but his
prospects were affected by minor penalties recommended against him by
the CVC in a 10-year-old case, though the watchdog cleared his name for
promotion as Member (Electrical) in February.
The
CVC’s action has surprised most officers, with Federation of Railway
Officers Association secretary-general Shubhranshu writing to Railway
Minister Mallikarjun Kharge and the CVC, urging that the decision be
reconsidered because it would affect the performance of the Railways.
Mr.
Virdi has formally protested the CVC’s recommendation, writing a letter
to Mr. Kharge, in which he said: “The timing of the case is clearly
designed to stall my chances.”
The post fell vacant
after the retirement of Mr. Vinay Mittal on June 30. Member (Mechanical)
Arunendra Kumar has been given additional charge of Chairman for three
months.
Mr. Virdi has charged the acting Chairman
with “machination” to reopen the case with the sole objective of
preventing him from becoming Chairman.
He pointed out
that the case, pertaining to the trial of perfume dispensers and a
disinfectant dispenser, was closed by the CBI, and the CVC suggested
systemic improvements. He asserted that his name had never figured in
the probe.
In his letter to the Railway Minister on
Thursday, Mr. Shubhranshu maintained that victimisation of this nature
would affect induction of technology in the Railways.
Mr.
Shubhranshu, who has sent copies of the letter to both the CBI and the
CVC, maintained that the CVC’s action violated the rules as it had not
sought any explanation from Mr. Virdi and two retired members, who too
had been proceeded against. He warned that such an action would result
in witch-hunt.
The CVC has directed the Railways to
find means of acting against two retired members — P.N. Garg and S.
Dhasarathy — knowing well that rules did not permit action against those
who had been in retirement for more than four years. Officers alleged
that the attempt was to sully their names in a bid to get at Mr. Virdi.
They maintained that Mr. Garg was so shocked by the news that he
suffered brain haemorrhage and was in a critical condition.
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