Durga Shakti Nagpals suspension is a reminder of how good administrative efforts are often hampered
Sometimes it takes a flagrant example to draw attention to an undesirable pattern. Durga Shakti Nagpals suspension appears to have roused the public conscience to the ways in which a determined official can be thwarted,even punished,for doing the right thing. By all accounts,as sub-divisional magistrate,Nagpal had been actively going after illegal sand mining in her district,which involved powerful political interests. She was summarily suspended by the Uttar Pradesh government,which cited her lack of judgement for directing that a wall of a mosque in Gautam Budh Nagar be demolished and allegedly touching off communal tension. The harshness of the order and the patent flimsiness of its justification have caused many to rally behind Nagpal. The matter has taken on a political aspect with UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi urging the prime minister to intervene to the extent possible. Given the fluctuating relationship of convenience between the Congress and the SP,and with the countdown for 2014 having begun,it is tempting to read between the lines of the Congress presidents letter. Whatever her motivations,however,Gandhi underlined the core issue the need to make sure that executive functionaries doing their work with a sense of mission are not hampered.
The terms of engagement between the political executive and the civil services are clearly laid out,but the lines are often smudged in practice. Political leaders exercise control through transfers and postings,often in vindictive ways. Civil servants are also often too biddable to powerful interests. However,there are many committed,public-spirited officers like Nagpal,who do not accede to an unfair environment. Their fate is a test of the system.