Table of Contents
- The Nagaland Civil Service Association has hit out at the Indian Administrative Service for representing a
- “Suitcase Bureaucracy”, alleging that officers posted in the state leave on any pretext they find.
- This comes weeks after the Narendra Modi government had pulled up the Nagaland government
- For illegally appointing non-IAS officers as district collectors.
Appointment of Non-IAS officers as DC
- Earlier this month, the Centre’s Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) had shot off a letter to the Nagaland chief secretary,
- Pulling up the state administration for posting non-IAS officers as collectors in six of its 11 districts, even though there is no shortage of IAS officers.
- The appointments, the DoPT had said, contravenes the All India Service rules.
What NCSA has to say?
- In a statement issued 26 July, the NCSA said the trend of “suitcase bureaucracy” was firmed up with the killing of two IAS officers in Nagaland, in 1974 and 1995.
- “These two tragic incidents greatly shaped bureaucracy in Nagaland. It began the chapter of what journalists would go on to call the era of ‘suitcase bureaucrats’ — IAS officers posted to the state would leave on any pretext they could find,” the statement read.
- “Some applied for leave and extended their leave for years.
- Those that could, applied for deputation and some managed to stay away on deputation without ever coming back to serve in the state.
- Many officers have changed their cadre altogether,”
- “Some were so reluctant to serve in Nagaland that they just disappeared for years on end without any explanation.”
- The NCSA alleged that the trend of “disappearing” IAS officers has continued even during the Covid-19 pandemic, leaving its management to state civil service officers.
What IAS officers have to say?
- “Officers from all states go for deputations, and transfers keep happening.
- That’s the nature of the All India Services. It doesn’t make anyone a ‘suitcase bureaucrat’,” the officer said.
- “This is a serious issue of a state civil service association making up reasons to justify an illegal practice… Ideally, the Centre should intervene on priority.”
Is this a new practice?
- The NCSA said, the trend of Nagaland state service officers being appointed as DCs is not new,
- Because the situation in the state is relatively peaceful, IAS officers now want to stay and take up the posts.
- It may even be seen as a positive development, an indicator that the situation is relatively peaceful in the state compared to earlier years; orders can be passed and followed without threat to life.
- Hence, many IAS officers are eager to serve as DCs.
NCSA justified its point
- To corroborate this point, the NCSA has said that at any given point,
- There ought to be 63 directly recruited IAS officers serving in the state — since the Nagaland cadre strength is 94, out of which one-third are officers promoted from the state civil service to the IAS.
- However, at present, there are no more than 32 IAS officers serving in the state.
- “They return to Nagaland for their cooling-off period (mandated to be one year) and leave as quickly as they can after.
- If the earlier reason was security, now it is that their children cannot access quality education or that they cannot be with their families.
- Doesn’t our state deserve more than a reluctant suitcase bureaucrat?”
Latest Burning Issues | Free PDF