Miffed over
‘massacre’, Khanday quits as Chief Secretary
Ahmed Ali
Fayyaz
______
SRINAGAR,
Aug 25: Developing serious differences with Mufti Mohammad Sayeed-led Cabinet,
Chief Secretary Iqbal Khanday has sought voluntary retirement from Indian
Administrative Service (IAS) with effect from August 31, 2015---three months
short of his date of superannuation.
“Yes,
yesterday (Monday) at 11.00 a.m. I have applied for voluntary retirement from
service with effect from August 31. My papers are pending with Chief Minister
who is currently on tour in New Delhi”, Mr Khanday, a 1978-batch IAS officer,
told STATE TIMES while confirming his resignation. He said that he would
continue to attend his office till August 31.
Earlier,
speaking to this correspondent over telephone Principal Secretary to Chief
Minister Bharat Bhushan Vyas denied to have seen or received any such
communication from the Chief Secretary. “I also heard it from different
sources. I didn’t feel it appropriate to ask Khanday Sahab if he had resigned”,
Vyas said.
Even as
Khanday declined to reveal what exactly led to his act of applying for
voluntary retirement three months ahead of his scheduled date of retirement,
highly placed bureaucratic sources revealed to this correspondent that the
Chief Secretary was “terribly miffed” over the last Friday’s administrative
reshuffle. “He called it a massacre, asked how could the Heads of Departments,
Deputy Commissioners, Secretaries to Government and Commissioner-Secretaries be
shifted after every three and four months to new places of posting in gross
violation of the transfer policy in vogue”, said a senior bureaucrat believed
to be close to Mr Khanday.
Another
highly placed IAS officer disclosed that on Thursday last, Mr Khanday had
requested Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed to defer the scheduled Cabinet
meeting of Friday (August 21) by one week.
“It was
communicated to him that the administrative reshuffle, which was the key agenda
item, could not be delayed as the Cabinet was meeting with a long pause of
three months. He was told that the meeting could be held in his absence.
Immediately thereafter, Principal Secretary Planning & Development Mr B.R.
Sharma was appointed as Cabinet Secretary for a day and it was decided to
proceed with the schedule in Mr Khanday’s absence”, the senior bureaucrat said.
“On Friday,
Mr Khanday stayed away on leave as his brother’s 10-day-old grandson had died.
However, the government took a serious note of the fact that nobody on that day
was present in Chief Secretary’s office. With the seniority, civil list and
some other key records not available immediately and the General Administration
Department being handicapped in absence of Chief Secretary on the day of a
crucial meeting, Government in a way communicated its displeasure to Mr
Khanday. Minutes after his arrival in office on Monday, Khanday tendered his
resignation”.
A different
well-placed bureaucratic source said that Khanday’s relationship with some
ministers---both of PDP and BJP---had begun to turn sour in May when a number
of his proposals were drastically changed. On one point of time, there was
almost an altercation between Chief Secretary and a Cabinet Minister from South
Kashmir, both asserting with their authority over certain transfers and
appointments. Chief Secretary had taken “a serious note” of the humiliation a
Deputy Commissioner in South Kashmir had been publicly subjected to by a
Minister’s “constituency incharge” in the matter of providing accommodation to
him at the district headquarters.
“The IAS
lobby had complained to CS that a young boy representing a Minister had
publicly threatened a DC and given him deadline of two days to give him
possession of a government quarter vacated by the transfer of a Deputy SP. Finally, a former MLC of Congress party was
thrown out and the Minister’s aide accommodated. Mr Khanday was visibly upset
over such developments”.
Sources said
that things came to a head when Mr Khanday failed to give a prize posting to
the attached KAS officer Talat Parvez Rohella. At least two Cabinet Ministers
had taken exception to it that on the one hand Government had removed Rohella
as Director of Tourism and ordered an inquiry into his conduct of having
created unauthorised liabilities to the tune of Rs 25 crore and on the other
hand same tainted official was being recommended for a key posting. In fact,
some of the Ministers had even demanded registration of FIR by Vigilance
Organisation against Mr Rohella, while dismissing the one-man inquiry, being
conducted by Commissioner-Secretary Agriculture Production Ashraf Bukhari, as
“eyewash”, aimed at giving a clean chit to the KAS officer.
The
Ministers had raised a question that if the Government had declared former CEO
of Sonmarg Development Authority Mohammad Yousuf “deadwood” and terminated his
service for issuing building permissions to hundreds of illegal hotels, why the
Director of Tourism, who functioned as Chairman of BOCA in all Tourist
Development Authorities, should be spared and given a prize posting.
Same
Ministers had also objected to Chief Secretary’s direction to Advocate General
to get the date of a hearing of a court case preponed so that his favourites
could be inducted into IAS before Mr Khanday’s own retirement on November 30,
2015.
According to
the sources, Mr Khanday had gone out of way to precipitate the induction into
IAS of his favourites who included KAS officers Dr Abdul Rashid (former IAS
officer Jaleel Khan’s son-in-law), Mohammad Saleem Shishgar (brother of
Commissioner-Secreatry GAD Gazanfar Hussain), Sheikh Fayyaz Ahmad (son of
former Chief Secretary Sheikh Ghulam Rasool), KAS inductees of Technical Quota
2000, besides Talat Parvez Rohella, Anil Kumar Gupta, Rukhsana Gani (Mr
Khanday’s own sister and wife of Divisional Commissioner Kashmir Dr Asgar
Samoon), Rehana Batool, Zubair Ahmad (Special Secretary to Chief Secretary),
Reva Kumari, Peerzada Hafizullah Shah and Mir Tariq Ali.
Sources said
that Mr Khanday was unhappy when some Ministers asked him to break the old
practice of bringing the administrative reshuffle as a non-agenda item during
the Cabinet meeting. “They made it clear that they would attend only if the
complete proposal list was provided to all Cabinet Ministers in advance. So it
was first time that such a list was provided to all the Ministers ahead of the
meeting”, one of the Cabinet Ministers disclosed to STATE TIMES.
END
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