Court,Parliament must weigh the need for operational autonomy with that of larger accountability
After the Supreme Courts strong words on the CBIs fettered functioning,the government has been trying to devise ways to insulate the investigative agency from political interference. A group of ministers will submit its suggestions in an affidavit to the Supreme Court on July 3. It will then go to a standing committee of Parliament. While the full details of the affidavit will be revealed then,the cabinet has cleared a set of recommendations. These changes were occasioned by this papers revelation that the previous law minister and PMO officials had significantly edited the CBIs confidential report on coal block allocation to suit the ruling coalition.
The aim is to ensure that the CBI remains accountable to the elected executive,while being free to pursue its work without interference. As the court and then Parliament ponder the suggestions,they must strive for the correct balance. The changes must enable the agency to resist politically motivated pressure,without cutting it loose from necessary executive oversight.