Ashok Khemka to be promoted as Principal Secretary in Haryana govt

New Delhi

IAS officer Ashok Khemka is going to be granted promotion to the post of Principal Secretary to the Government of Haryana. Bureaucrat Ashok Khemka had during Congress government in Haryana questioned a land deal of Robert Vadra, sone-in-law of Congress president Sonia Gandhi. Khemka had ordered the scrapping of the land deal involving Vadra then, saying that it was illegal and alleging that Vadra’s land deals caused loss of crores of rupees to the state. He also ordered a probe. Later, Khemka was transferred and served a charge sheet for his actions by the Hooda government, which gave Vadra a “clean chit”. Khemka was given proper posting only after BJP government came to power in Haryana.


Khemka among 6 officers promoted as Financial Commissioner & Principal Secretary by Haryana govt

Chandigarh

Senior IAS officer Ashok Khemka who had cancelled the mutation of a land deal between a firm owned by Sonia Gandhi’s son-in-law Robert Vadra and realty major DLF, was among six officers today promoted to the rank of Financial Commissioner and Principal Secretary by the Haryana government.

Khemka is currently posted as Secretary and Director General, Archaeology and Museums Department of Haryana Government.

The other five IAS officers of 1991 batch who have been promoted to the rank of Financial Commissioner and Principal Secretary are

Abhilaksh Likhi, Vineet Garg, Anil Malik, AK Singh and Shrikant Walgad said a senior official here.

“These officers have been promoted to the Higher Administrative Grade (HAG) which entitles them to be designated as Financial Commissioner and Principal Secretary,” Additional Chief Secretary, Sanjeev Kaushal said.

Kaushal further said the officers who have been promoted will continue holding the same charge which they are presently handling.

In November 2015, the BJP led Haryana government had dropped charge sheet against Khemka in which he had been charged by the previous Congress regime with exceeding his jurisdiction when he had cancelled the mutation of a land deal between a firm owned by Robert Vadra and realty major DLF three years back.

Khemka came into limelight in 2012 when he had cancelled the mutation of land deal between Skylight Hospitality owned by Vadra and DLF.

The Rs 58 crore deal related to 3.5 acre land in Gurgaon’s Shikohpur village, which was sold by Vadra to DLF amid controversy over allegations of undervaluation. PTI


PM nod must for suspending IAS officers working with Centre

New Delhi
IAS officers working under central government cannot be suspended without the nod of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a move aimed at allowing bureaucrats to take decisions without any fear of political backlash.

A relief has also been provided in the revised rules to all-India services officers — IAS, IPS and IFoS — working in various states in the revised rules under which the Centre needs to be informed within 48 hours if any officer is suspended by them followed by a detailed report within a fortnight.

The rules also cut short to two months from three months the period of suspension of an officer by the Centre and states. The order of suspension, if it is extended, will now be valid for four months as against existing six months period.

“IAS officers working under central government shall only be suspended on the recommendations of the central review committee as amended with the approval of Minister-in-charge, Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT),” the new rules said.

The Prime Minister is in charge of Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions which has DoPT as one of the departments.

The three-member central review committee will be headed by Secretary in DoPT and will have Establishment Officer and another Secretary of ministry concerned, as its members.

“The government’s aim is to eradicate corruption from bureaucracy and we also wish to provide officer-friendly environment so that none of the officers is intimidated by any of the government rules and give their performance.

“The new rules will also encourage honest officers and ensure justice for all,” Minister of State for Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions Jitendra Singh told PTI. (More) PTI AKV SKL VSC

The move assumes significance as officers like Ashok Khemka, Durga Sakthi Nagpal and Kuldip Narayan, among others, have allegedly been victims of arbitrary suspension and transfer.

According to the All India Services (Discipline and Appeal) Amendment Rules, 2015, as soon as a member of the service is placed under suspension or is deemed to have been placed under suspension, the information in this regard shall be communicated to the Government of India expeditiously and within a period of 48 hours.

A copy of the suspension order along with the reasons or grounds of suspension shall be communicated to the cadre controlling authority (DoPT for IAS, Home Ministry for IPS and Environment Ministry for IFoS) in the central government “not later than forty eight hours”, it further said.

There was no such time-limit in the existing rules.

An order of suspension, which has not been extended shall be valid for a period not exceeding sixty days and an order of suspension which has been extended shall remain valid for a further period not exceeding 120 days, at a time, unless revoked earlier, the new rules said. PTI