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Friday 5 May 2023

HAS THE CIVIL SERVICE CITADEL BEEN BREACHED ? .

    

   I was privy last week to an extended Whatsapp chat between a serving senior IAS officer (let's call him K) and a venerable retired colleague about the extra-legal execution of the gangster-politician Atiq Ahmed. K, who otherwise plays the victim card more often than the Prime Minister does, was vehement in his support of the lynching, maintaining that when the system fails people are justified in taking the law into their own hands. His unequivocal view is that since the IAS and IPS have failed, it is "only Yogi's gang and their guns" which can ensure security for the common man. These are the views of an officer whose job it is to uphold the law, who has sworn an oath to protect the Constitution. Today he is advocating cold blooded murder, and no amount of reasoning by the retired veteran would make him change his mind. In fact, he flaunted his opinion by putting it up on a Whatsapp group and then defending it abrasively.

   The second disconcerting example is provided by a recent article by another senior serving IAS officer, this time the Director of the premier Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration, Mussoorie, the alma mater of  All India Service officers. This gentleman (who predictably belongs to the Gujarat cadre of the IAS) offers the view that the IAS did not have a national ethos (whatever that means) till 2014, that governments before Modi were unable to rid the service of its "colonial mindset" or "craft a civil service rooted in the national ethos", that "this task of defining an Indian ethos for the civil service began in the 75th year of India's independence, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's address where he spelt out the country's vision......"

   There is much more of this sacerdotal nonsense in the article, but essentially, once we extract the meaning from this oily sludge, what this Kangana Ranaut- Amitabh Kant clone is saying is that the IAS continued to be a colonial service till 2022, its members having no connect with the people, that it was only after  Modi's arrival that it acquired relevance and a patriotic ethos. One would have dismissed this garbage as just some more of the persiflage we read everyday nowadays, except for the fact that this acolyte heads the institute which trains all our senior civil servants, drafts the syllabus for their training, imparts to them the first impressions of what their service will be like, defines the parameters of their future responsibilities and expectations. With the continued patronage of the Godfather, his capacity for undermining the originally neutral, independent, secular and apolitical nature of the All India Services is unlimited.

   The danger which is now staring the bureaucracy in the face cannot be underestimated. It is much more foundational than merely transferring inconvenient officers and rewarding the loyal ones, which has been the template so far since 1950. The effort now is to indoctrinate and mould the officers right from their training days in the image of their maker so that they will become mere party apparatchiks. (This, quite clearly, was the subtle hint to them from the PM himself recently when he exhorted them to keep a vigil on the spending of funds by political parties (read: Opposition parties), something which is not part of their job). 

   What alarms me is not just the perverted psychology and utterances of these two gentlemen. It is this: these two officers have been recruited, trained and have served in an era of relative liberal democracy, when constitutional values were generally respected, even though they might not always have been upheld in the ideal manner they should have been. And yet, it has taken just a few years of this regime for them to have capitulated to, and embrace, the new majoritarian, intolerant and authoritarian narrative that is the lingua franca of governance today. What hope then is there for those who are joining the civil services today, trained, guided and mentored by the likes of K and the Director referred to ? Will these new entrants be able to retain the vision of a Sardar Patel when he insisted on retaining the All-India services as an apolitical, federal, independent agency free to speak its mind, or will they become mere foot soldiers of a hegemonic ruling party which has made no secret of its desire to change the Constitution to conform to its own ideology? Will these "compliant managers" (an apt term coined by Mr. M.G.Devashayam in an article in THE WIRE) go on to join the Agniveers of the defence forces as the new storm troopers of the BJP/RSS combine?

   My fear is that Patel's vision is receding into history and may soon be redacted altogether. I interact fairly extensively with colleagues, both serving and retired, individually and through a number of Whatsapp groups. And their conduct and indifference worries me: the vast majority prefer to remain mute, content to get their pensions and salaries on time, devoting themselves to asinine forwards, as if the changes taking place around them are of no consequence. Many more are closet bhakts, clearly sympathetic to the new narrative of a fake Amritkaal but lacking the courage to openly say so. But an increasingly growing number of them are vocal supporters of the brutalisation of society and government, the vigilante justice, the exclusionary intolerance, the predatory use of police and regulatoty agencies to stamp out any dissent, the curbing of basic freedoms that are the norm today. Try as I might, I can find no sensible reason to explain this deterioration in character, except to wonder whether Ambedkar was right after all in stating that democracy in India is only a top soil, a thin covering that can be easily washed away. Perhaps the monster that is gradually emerging through this top soil- a hatred for minorities and a death wish for authoritarianism- was always latent in our character, covered by a shallow layer given us by our founding fathers but now washed away by a Devil's wind.

   It's the civil services that have held this country together for 75 years, for all their faults and mistakes, through wars, riots, droughts, famines, changes of government, disasters, endemic corruption and worse. Stumbling at times and blundering at others, they have nonetheless preserved our nation as a functioning democracy. But now these same services are getting unraveled through the latent prejudices, short-sightedness and sycophancy of its own members, serving and retired. I wonder if it will help to remind them of the words of the great Sardar on why he insisted on retaining the steel frame of the IAS:

"There is no alternative to this administrative system...The Union will go, you will not have a united India if you do not have a good All India Service which has the independence to speak out its mind, which has the sense of security that you will standby your work....If you do not adopt this course, then do not follow the present Constitution..... Remove them and I see nothing but a picture of chaos all over the country."

  Sadly, the New India has no place for a Sardar Patel, only for "Karmayogis" following in the footsteps of a Pied Piper. The Sardar himself has been reduced to a mute statue.            

13 comments:

  1. Something ominous which has gone without comment from any quarter is the traditional annual Prime Minister's address to IAS officers on 21st April on the occasion of Civil Services Day.
    Narendra Modi's speech was nakedly political in content, contrasting at lenght what he claimed was a corruption free administration post 2014 with the period prior. He made the pious claim that it was "I" who freed "all of you" from "protocol" and "hierarchy." He also launched a thinly veiled attack on AAP/Kejriwal by saying that public funds should be used for the common good and not to further party interests or for political advertisements. He went on to seduce the IAS officers' audience by praising them, saying all of this was possible only because of their efforts in that direction. Of course among the IAS officers presents would be many who had put in 20 years or more, straddling the golden year 2014, who would have served earlier governments both at the Centre and in the states.
    Civil servants, by definition,especially in a democracy, are expected to be strictly neutral. Never before 2014 has any PM spoken in the shamelessly partisan manner in which Narendra Modi spoke on 21st April. Nor had any other minister at any other official function.
    The examples you have cited of officer "K" and of the Director of the Mussorie Academy are symptoms of the new-era civil service in India. And the loud silence on Narendra Modi's 21st April speech is proof that a committed civil service has been accepted as the norm.

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  3. I am a 70 year old retired army (real army i.e., infantry) officer, adding my voice here. I write a substack - IndianSalute. Also author of book -The red pill on India and Indian Army 2023 - on Amazon. My contention is that India and Indian Army are in bad shape. Avay has said here that the changing, wrong attitude of civil servants is a matter of concern for the nation. The same is true for the changing attitude of serving and retired army officers.
    I merely ask my brothers in service to look at what could possibly be wrong in army training and equipment that we get so many casualties and are not able to deter anyone. Just this much. But the response stuns me. Just the suggestion that we should look inwards has got me fully ostracized, not that it matters. My closest friends of a lifetime - NDA squadron coursemates - have requested me to leave the WhatsApp group.
    When I ask them as to which of my attitudes bother them - that there could indeed be something wrong with the army (and the nation) or, that 'how dare I ask that in public'? They mostly agree that a lot is wrong but I must be loyal to my old service and not talk about it. In their eyes, it is the ultimate form of disloyalty.
    My message to them has been - ;IndianSalute is all about how citizens are responsible for their country and their army. I'm calling for help from people who'd like to see their country and army get better. Would you like to help? Correct me. Happy to remove my cynicism,' But,, no response. Just black dark silence.

    To me, this almost marks the end of Indian army as an effective protector of India from even external enemies, and definitely from the internal ones.
    Indian army - and India - are in bad shape. Army is very politicized, inefficient, ill-equipped and badly led at the level of Major general onwards. The number of casualties we see against very poorly equipped militants operating in hostile territory, as mostly unwarranted.

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  4. Narendra Modi expects the Civil Services to do his bidding. It was not without precedent that the Prime Minister addressed them on Civil Services Day, exhorting them to come heavily on resistances from the Opposition. Ajit Doval had addressed the passing out of the IPS similarly in 2021, pressing upon the new recruits to identify internal pushback as the "fourth frontier" of warfare. Late Gen. Bipin Rawat showed his inclination towards vigilante justice by urging locals in JK to arm themselves and help neutralise militants. The Prime Minister’s address was a call to the Bureaucracy to sway it from its pledge towards neutrality.

    Nationalism and theocratic bias have been grabbed by this government and raised to unwitnessed heights. It peddles its agenda overtly and seeks to influence everybody from judges to the common man to align with itself. Civil servants as the ones mentioned are perhaps an outcome of that relentless impact this regime exerts to successfully tear some away from their training, the Law, and their vow to fairness.

    To be non-partisan, one must accuse past governments of having engaged in similar invidious attempts. Their modus operandi though, was not religious drumming or hyper nationalism, but earning commitment by extending unstopping gratification.

    Either way is debilitating for the Bureaucracy which is the lifeblood of a democratic government. An administrative service demonstrating fealty for a regime, inclining towards a belief with theocratic roots, or shorting the law to achieve justice is the infantry of an authoritarian leadership. Whoever the leader be.

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  5. I have this feeling that most members of various WhatsApp groups of serving and retired AIS officers remain quiet and unresponsive to the most provocative and sensible comments/ exchange is because they have nothing to say. One can make out an active, moderately well read, thinking mind (even one ideologically committed) from the content and quality of the response. What do we have instead, from the people who so openly and pompously brag (along with their extended families!) about having gotten into these jobs after insane kind of competition? Silence. Or as Mr Shukla puts it so aptly, "asinine forwards" and liberal use of emojis. Let's face it, very few bureaucrats read and write regularly or indulge in such ideas! Thinking is still way off.

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  6. Thanks for this piece. I agree that the rot in the institutions of India is now close to complete. Modi had destroyed all institutions (civil service, police, judiciary) while he was CM of Gujarat. It was a very successful model. As PM he first focused on destroying the Supreme Court and succeeded brilliantly (Babri Masjid!). The civil service was already half dead since the time of Indira Gandhi. He has merely helped to kill it off completely. The police stopped being independent ages ago. Baghpat blindings were taught to us as a case study in the Academy well before Atiq Ahmed.

    There are always honorable exceptions to the rule but with the judiciary being almost entirely destroyed, there is little to no scope for these few honest members of the civil service/police fraternity to do much.

    Btw, one can agree with Patel's insistence on using the ICS at the time of indepedence but also disagree with his creation of the constitutional All-India services. There were better ways to create a comptent and independent civil service. Nevertheless, the rot started during Patel's time itself with Nehru's socialism - the destruction of property rights and the wiping out of the defences built by Ambedkar. Everything else was merely a natural consequence.

    India is too far down the path of suicide now. It is next to impossible to change course. There's no political opposition like Rajaji had tried to offer. Congress is the same as BJP, with lesser cow-worship.

    I have tried for over 2 decades to get an opposition up and running, but Indians are smitten by socialism. There is absolutely no support for liberty and good governance in India. I'm afraid there's not much good news for India's future. There is a good reason why every young man's dream now is to get out of India.

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  7. Sad but oh so true!
    The fact that the armed forces are also descending (being pushed) into that dark abyss which 56" and his army of braindead lumpen element keep excavating further to accommodate the ever expanding horde of new recruits being forced to frog-march to the tune of the pied piper, should and does frighten every single right-thinking Indian.
    How long must we wait for a slight chink of light to peep through these ominous dark clouds?

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  8. Most wonder how did the grass grow under your feet while you are awake.Some say it is the witches brew.The better endowed and the erudite would prefer the phrase 'magic realism '.
    When Generals speak it goes.For aren't they in the know.They direct wars .So what if they do not make them.Avay Shukla has commandeered crowds, mobs,the lumpen,simple-minded people mostly unlettered.The joys and woes of it all he would well know.But having hung his civvies - in a manner of speaking - his pen or more correctly his fingers are alive.Just as well. He too would know.Won't he?

    Respect and loyalty, like always, gets mixed up into a heady shake of gullibility. Nevertheless, they who held the instruments of power matter.They let us, have be, eavesdroppers - a peek into dirty cupboards.
    Before you even yawn away one more of my circumambulations - do read it.Please.

    Zindabad @sunilkumarbanerjee dated 08 May 2023 ✒️

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  9. # in hindustan we have a problem with taking responsibility; the fault is always with the other. at the temple of apollo at delphi among the many maxims engraved 'in stone' was the central maxim "gnothi seauton" - know thyself. among the others is - everything in moderation. according to a popular narrative post 2014 is that narendrabhai has cause irrevocable damage to the institutions, ethos that had been our pride circa 1947. to this an observer has noted that the current brouhaha is in the main between the mission compound hindus and the bazaar hindus; to put it another way - between the babu-bazaar biradri's english medium cohort and the bazaar. the former were mostly progeny of compradors who did well out of colonialism, queued up to send their children to mission compound secondary schools that the goras had set up for giving a smattering of education to the children of domiciled europeans, orphans of european soldiers, and latterly a few eurasians. these schools were the feeder stock for subordinate employment as - european police sergeants, locomotive drivers, telegraphists, etc. alumni did not, generally, aspire to university education. ironically the compradors viewed these 'st xaviers, lawrence schools, bishop cottons' as prestigious prep schools. whereas the INC, and mohandas gandhi, had been bankrolled by the bazaar and the bourgeois, come 1947 they found that the gymnkhana club was still closed to them, and they had to continue to do with chelmsford. the compradors simply moved into the bungalows vacated by the departing colonials. hard work did not matter for this set, it was all about working the system. their mantra - privilege and patronage. and a caste system - the 'direct recruits' the brahmins; the inspectors, 'promotee officers' the kshatriyas; the clerical cadres the vaishyas; the peons, uniformed subordinates the sudras, and not to forget even an out-caste, dalit group [those hanging around, hoping for a leg up, officiate in a leave vacancy, ad-hoc workers for two and even three decades]. meritocracy be damned, promotions, elevation was by cohort, in phalanx for the heaven born. every tom, his dick, and their hairy would superannuate at the apex grade. and professionalism was subverted by what they termed as generalists. hence english literature, history graduates working in finance and treasury, as comptroller and auditor general, as development economists. most of those selected by the public service commission were drawn from the ranks of those who had been defeated by higher algebra while at school and had been pushed into the arts, commerce stream. multivariate calculus, linear algebra - perish the thought. little wonder that other than quangos and sinecures superannuated babus have no currency in the corporate sector - a serious dearth of chief executives notwithstanding.

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  10. # as for our faujis, other than banging on about the warrant of precedence and the COAS being progressively downgraded and how prior to 1947 a DO from a commanding officer to a deputy commissioner about a jawan’s problems would part even the red sea, the less said the better. without a blush the force that could not contain the LTTE boasts it is going to contain beijing’s PLA. no heads rolled when it was discovered that elements of gilgit scouts had built steel and concrete reinforced gun positions overlooking NH 1A at kargil without the patrols setting out from infantry battalions at batalik noticing the ongoing work [gas welding and concrete mixing that would have taken a good three months plus of toil] and finally the bunkers were destroyed after acquiring post haste depleted uranium tipped projectiles from tel-aviv. the dereliction continues - of the 65 mutually agreed patrol points in the galwan sector, 26 had been disregarded, forsaken by our bravehearts, for unconscionable lengths of time. chandal forces now decline to allow our patrols covering those points. the darbuk, shyok, daulet-beg-oldi all weather road took 19 years to complete. in its 14th year CVC found that the road was being built on the river bed of the shyok. no heads rolled; brigade, division, corps commanders had been traversing this axis and blinkered did not notice what would have been obvious to a muleteer. contractors bills were scrutinised, counter-signed, passed, paid. seriously, can we blame narendrabhai, amitbhai. can they be blamed for our fighting forces not having a half decent corps of NCOs. our havildars, havildar majors are merely jawans with stripes. an officer gives orders, the NCOs, warrant officers ensure the orders are carried out. our faujis do not even understand fire-control orders. once they begin firing, continue shooting off till they run out of on-weapon and pouch ammunition. it happened at the jaffna football ground with 10 para (special forces) and again 21 para (special forces) at mon [nagaland]. any terrorist worth her salt knows that with indian faujis once you get them in a funk they will keep firing till they run out of rounds, then you can pick them off. the NCOs simply have no control. in a firefight it is the NCOs that an officer has to depend upon. the job of an officer is to lead the men, and bring them out safely with as few casualties as possible while capturing the objective - this is military economics.

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  11. Dear Mr. Shukla…

    Mr. George Ninan has condemned very articulately, in his exceedingly ornate style, the generational leftovers of the compradors that he says are the root cause of the degeneration of all civil and administrative functioning in the country.
    He asserts unflinchingly that your institution of public service is the bastardised discard of unintelligent personnel, who have at best taken up the Arts and Commerce stream of education and filled posts of administrative service within the country. Simply because those groomed at Mussourrie have neither the skill nor the mind to grasp the intricacies of higher education, notably the wonders of science and mathematics.

    Mr. George Ninan causes me to froth at the mouth in stunned stupor but that is all the reaction I am able to generate to his opinion. And disagree with him forcefully.

    I am reasonably certain that the intent of your blog was concern for your alma mater and your "karmabhoomi" from the onslaught of wrenching Executive influence and excessive nationalistic pressures. It was not to deride, denigrate or de-emphasise its worth in the Indian system of administration.
    Unfortunately, it seems to have been misinterpreted by most and damned consequently, with Mr. George Ninan deriving ballast to a glaringly disproportionate extreme.

    The Indian Public Services is among the best in the world, comprising the top layered cream of educated and well informed individuals. Everyone is groomed through an unparalleled curriculum at the Institute, and earns their stripes after being smelted out of the blistering cauldron.
    There have been instances replete when these officers of the highest standing have fallen from grace or deserted their pledges, injuring the Institute. That is not sufficient to delete or defeat the public services, nor for Mr. George Ninan to plaster insult to the injury.

    If - and I shudder to think so - you are in consonance with Mr. George Ninan, then it will be a sorrowful time indeed, when he who has toiled for four decades with his continuous service to the public, and burnished the Institute with his contribution, is now defaming it for the mis-actions of a handful of misguided invertebrate officers.

    I am certain this is not the case Sir.

    I stay yours faithfully…

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  12. Ominous for sure. This change in ethos and thinking has not only affected the civil services; a downward slide is seen in the oficer intake of the armed forces as well. From a secular, liberal, all inclusive, apolitical, well read leadership-- we are now transiting to what the ruling powers want.

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  13. So.
    This is a hotter potato than before.
    Strong feelings for gloomy tales of betrayal.
    Not many do that as effectively as Avay because he really knows his stuff. Funnily though, his prophetic sight is a reverse swing of pessimistic glowering, not infrequently triumphant (bar the hurrahs), because what is good and correct are the quieter parts of his articles.
    But this isn't about Avay.
    The governing disposition has actually created its own pandemic, a pandemic of free-fall. Nothing going anywhere but down.
    Speaking for myself, I'd like to go to Utopia for a bit.
    Point is -
    Can the form of democracy be improved? In our case, though we are more recent than several and only a young mother at 70+, surely that is enough experience to know and see where the faults are. Autocratic conversion once avoided by the bell but also a tribute for accepting responsibility for the costly mistake. And the other time, now, hurtling pell-mell into chaos.
    It should be taken with every seriousness that one of Karan Thapar's recent guests actually warned of civil war. And another, close on the heels, perhaps less radical, saying central intervention has not worked (despite 'a State Visit') and President's rule is the only answer paving the way to many imponderables and rightful change of the system, binding upon all.
    (a) Therefore, is there scope for limited tenures? A bit like the U.S but also with a bonus if the work and paradigms are beneficial?
    (b) Can State representation be based on averages rather than number of constituencies? The list of concerns are more or less the same in every state give or take a hiccup. Why then can't there be one MP per ministry from each state in Parliament and one at home? Hypothetically say 15 key areas of management. How many states, UTs and seats in Parliament? MP's like Chair of Office and Secretaries like CEOs. Responsibilities, culpabilities unavoidable.
    (c) Let Parliament elect the PM and the Deputy PM. For a term of five years and another five if review is good. (Nitty gritties/ details can be arrived at in the small print). Let there be a stepping down policy as well as a protective policy so there is fairness in departure and a clear-cut system of succession.
    (d) Similarly for the Ministries. Even for the President & Vice President. Once elected VP at base year, thereafter to run unhindered through elevation and tenure.
    (e) Let the National Parliament not be about political parties but about concerns and progress.
    (f) Political ideologies can be played out at State level. Well explained and known by all. The people are capable of knowing what priorities are and what they should be and how best to sort those out. The people of the State would then be guided by the wisdom of their State and not by that of a political party. Especially if wisdom is in short supply.
    (g) The States would then, befittingly, be given much more due because that's where the people are.
    (h) However, contentious matters like identity, special interest groups, mass protests, national security, force majeure issues etc are Parliamentary policy decisions, ratified by the Judiciary.
    (i) We could take away many of our present day griefs. Debate and discussion in the House would no longer be stymied by personal attacks and vicious play-acting. The MPs and not party members would self-govern.
    It would be in the fitness of things then, for the State to send its best to Parliament, irrespective of party. It would be an honour of a lifetime to be trusted by one's opponents. If areas, policies & conduct are clear then fractious mismanagement and complicity could well be minimised.
    Please treat this as an offering for consideration from one who knows much less than the excellent writers above. But sometimes school experiences do more than win battles at Waterloo and a rowdy free-for-all game of grabbing the ball and running 400 odd years ago, is a world cup tournament today.

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