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TIME TO IMPR OVE T HE QUALITY O F

CIVIL SE RVI CE

PRAVEEN KUMAR

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PRAVEEN KUMAR
GB, HAYES HALL, HAYES ROAD,
BANGALORE-560025. ( Karnataka, INDIA )
pryveen@yahoo.com / pryveen@gmail.com
Phone : 080-41125309
Mobiles : 09901979567 / 09945336849

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TIME TO IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF CIVIL SERVICE

PRAVEEN KUMAR

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PUBLISHED WORKS OF PRAVEENKUMAR

English writings

POLICING FOR THE NEW AGE


POLICING THE POLICE

English poems

UNKNOWN HORIZONS
PORTRAITS OF PASSION

Kannada poems

DIVYA BELAKU
BHAVANA
PRIYA CHAITRA TAPASVINI

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COMMENTS
BHAVANA
(Poems In Kannada)

The work is a bunch of lilting poems in easy, intimate


and cosy kannada. They are the reveries of a trained
and critical mind of a mature poet with an observing
and penetrating eye and sharp sensitivity to the
world around.......the canvas for his 62 short pieces
of poetry is the whole gamut of human life, its
charms and beauty..... And is highly enjoyable.....
There is also a bouquet of the ecstatic world of
lovers and romance.

THE HINDU

UNKNOWN HORIZONS
(Poems In English)

There is an element of delight and surprise


throughout. The poet is aware of the wonderful
world of nature and of man. So he is able to employ
telling images to portray his inner feelings of
beauty and love.

DR. M. GOPALAKRISHNA ADIGA

POLICING FOR THE NEW AGE


(Essays on Police)

Mr. Praveen kumar in this treatise has exhaustively


dealt with various aspects of policing with
reference to the new challenges.....his approach
to the various topics is refreshingly sound. He has
dealt with each subject in a thorough -and
thoughtful manner.

CHIEF JUSTICE HON'BLE S. MOHAN


(SUPREME COURT JUDGE)
in introduction to the book

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The language is flowery.....there is a need to
appreciate his ruthless exposure of the
criminalisation of politics and the politicisation of
the police... His treatises on dowry deaths and
their investigation and on police dogs are
characteristically thorough and sound meriting
universal attention.....there is no doubt that the
author who has already acquired a reputation as
a poet is a highly sensitive and cultured person.

THE HINDU

POLICING THE POLICE


(Essays On Police)

A Police officer and a prolific writer, Praveen Kumar, has published


another anthology ……….in the form of this book.……… "Policing the police"
acquires more relevance today in the context of the criminalisation of not
just politics, but of the services as well……….Coming as a sequel to his
earlier book Policing for the New Age, the author chooses to describe
policemen as "social doctors" and policing as a "surgical operation to
systematically remove cancerous growths from the body of society”.

THE HINDU

Praveen Kumar is not only an upright police officer but also a poet and a
prolific writer.……..Policing the Police—an analytical Study of the
philosophy and field dynamics of the policing in practice highlight
various problem areas including defective selection and
recruitment,unsound training and unhealthy job culture and identifies
likely solutions for its redemption.

DECCAN HERALD

Praveen Kumar gives an insight into the Indian police set-up and analyses
the problems of the department, with interesting illustrations from the
field. Mr Kumar's book is a departure from the routine, where he not only
analyses the problems, but also suggests solutions.

THE ASIAN AGE

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The author expresses concern over sycophants climbing the ladder and
reaching the top to hold the reins and guide the destiny of the police.
The result — a spiritless culture created by incompetent
leaders…….Policing the police involves self-policing. Through the book,
the author has made an honest effort to throw some light on the state of
affairs of Indian police.

THE TIMES OF INDIA

A police officer unravels his profession.

INDIA TODAY

Policing with a cause. Policing The Police by Praveen Kumar.…….delves


deeply on this core aspect of policing and lays bare the Indian Police
setup, sheath by sheath………He interprets police and policing through the
prism of a poet’s sensibilities.

THE HINDUSTAN TIMES

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TIME TO IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF CIVIL SERVICE

Published in THE HINDU daily dated March 2, 1999

(Authored by PRAVEEN KUMAR, mail: pryveen@yahoo.com)

India wanted its All India Services of the post-independent era to break away from the British

legacy and as a first step altered the names of the services. It is an irony that the process led to and

marked a dilution of quality. The present Indian Administrative Services is not even a poor shadow of

the old Indian Civil Service; nor does the Indian Foreign Service bears a resemblance to the Indian

Political Service; and the present Indian police service lacks the vigour of the good old Indian Police.

The old All India Services was built on the tripod of faultless selection and recruitment, perfect

training and exposures to the highest standards of professionalism and character to sustain it throughout.

But, new India just failed to give these factors the importance they deserved.

Reasons for this deterioration are many. The first is inherent lack of passion for quality and

excellence. The agency incharge of selections, the Union Public Service Commission, is manned by

people unequal for the task either in their professionalism, efficiency, passion for brilliance or basic

character, How can the process be reversed?

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Merciless pruning of the extant services to create a compact and highly responsible core of

administrative potentialities to handle a few sensitive key positions in the colossus of the administration

is needed now. Nothing short or brilliance and highest potentiality to handle the affairs of the country

should find a place in the wing that is responsible for constituting the nerve-centre. The administration

must be kept beyond the purview of extraneous constraints such as reservation of any kind and even age

restrictions by way of multiple point entries for different age groups. The guiding principle here is

drawing the best talents from whatever sources without restraints of any kind for the best results. The

services should not be treated as an employment opportunity to the elite, but as the foundation and

pillars of the government.

HUMAN RESOURCE

The basic source of manpower for these services has to be boys and girls below the age of 16

years who have completed secondary education. The selection must be made part of the final

secondary examination. The UPSC must be made responsible for grooming those recruited. The

commission must handle their further academic studies at the government’s expense for the next seven

years to meet the demand of the services.

Identifying the best talents of the country at higher age groups has to be the goal of the

Establishment Cell created within the UPSC on the lines of the Establishment Officer of the Home

Department of the British Raj. The cell must get busy scouting for best talents from whatever source for

direct absorption to the All India Services at the appropriate levels after initial training. Outstanding

professionals, technocrats and creative minds of proven calibre can be the candidates.

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Every recruit has to be put in independent charge of a subordinate job for two years under the

supervision of a competent senior officer. His performance in this sphere must from a vital ingredient

in the annual assessment. The trainee must be judged at every stage at different levels to decide his

or her suitability for various jobs.

Five years of regular service after the field training must pave the way for the first promotion.

This must function as a natural filtering process as those fit should be promoted in the mainstream

while others get elevated to higher ranks in the related subordinate departments to man posts covered

under the Central Services.

Mr.B.K.Nehru, in his memoirs “ Nice Guys Finish Second” refers to an incident in 1950s

wherein the then Finance Minister T.T.Krishnamachari, asked the chairman of the Central Board of

Revenue to show him a particular income-tax file. The latter refused point blank on the ground that the

law did not allow it. While he agreed that T.T.K. was his superior, he contended that he himself could

see the file as the chief of the Income-Tax Department while TTK could not as he was not directly

involved with the department. India needs such spirit.

While the Ministers must lay down objectives and policies, their secretaries must formulate

programmes including drafting appropriate laws and rules to channel the government objectives and

policies. The onus of implementation of the programmes must be left to the departments concerned.

India, in the pre-independent years needed brilliant people to handle its administration. British

India, with all its brilliant ideas and administrative wisdom, created the All India Services. It recruited

brilliant people for the services, imparted the best possible training to them, exposed them to the highest

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standards of the profession and presented them the best of trust, powers and opportunities to carry out

their responsibilities. The Government took care of all their personal needs, provided them with many

opportunities for growth and bestowed on them a halo of invincibility.

The training programmes for the services should be relevant to the time and highly advanced in

content. Subjects taught have to be updated every year by experts and made challenging even to the

brightest among the members of the services unlike present training programmes which are intellectually

impoverished, irrelevant to the time and do not help tune attitudes to higher levels. Another need is

making the promotional tests mandatory and of a high standard. Overhauling the present mediocre

Union Police Service Commission to create an efficient and responsible set-up capable of handling the

enormous responsibilities under Article 320 that compels attention to arrest the degeneration set in, in

the set-up that led to blunders in identifying talents and managing the services.

CREDIBILITY OF THE UPSC

A recent case is from Karnataka where three promising officers from the state cadre were denied

selection by the UPSC to an All India Service for no obvious reason for ten years from 1990 while their

juniors scored the elevation. The acute frustration and demoralisation caused led to the break-up of

family life of one of the promising trio and subsequent divorce, repeated violent behaviour by him in

public leading to public humiliation and ultimately involvement in a murder case ending in his arrest and

conviction.

The answer to unprofessional transgressions by the UPSC lies in transforming it to a highly

professional outfit managed by people of unimpeachable character, efficiency responsibility. The

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objective can be achieved by suitable amendment to Articles 316 and 317 to ensure that only right and

sensible people become members and chairman of the organisation and remain in the saddle only till

they retain their moral and professional calibre.

This can be made possible by the constitution of a committee comprising the Chief Justice of the

Supreme Court, Chief Commissioner of Central Vigilance Commission and Speaker of Parliament as

members and the Vice-President of India as the Chairman to clear the names for appointments as

members and chairmen of the UPSC for a fixed tenure and initiate actions for their removal by an

appropriate procedure in fit cases. Changes to this effect in Articles 316 and 317 plug the loopholes in

the existing provisions that provide too much scope for political interferences in the selection of

members and chairman of the UPSC.

All –India Services as the nerve-centre of the administration has to be made responsible to an

apex body called All India Services apex board. The board should oversee, supervise, study, control

and manage every affair pertaining to the Services at its own collective wisdom and discretion with

powers of rewards, punishment and placements invested with it. Sensitive posts in the governments

and public undertakings have to be identified in advance for the All India Services and once it is done,

placements have to be left to the wisdom and discretion of the apex board. The governments concerned

and public undertakings as employers must keep the apex body constantly and periodically informed

about the performances of each official placed under it and request changes wherever necessary with

reasons therefore. The final decision on such requests has to be left to the judgement of the apex board

based on its constant research, study, enquiry and assessment.

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The best bet for professional resolve and high commitment in such an apex body is having senior

most officers of the All-India Service in fine fettle as members of the apex board under the seniormost

member as the chairman, appointed strictly on seniority. It is these members with tow-thirds majority

who must be empowered to bar a competent senior officer from becoming a member or remove an

existing member of chairman from the board by recording sufficient reasons for the act.

Under the new scheme one should be committed to service for life unless one offers to retire on

health or personal grounds or forced out by the apex board for valid reasons. Except in cases of

retirement on request before the age of 60 years for nonmedical reasons or removal by the apex board

as a punishment, every officer should be entitled to all the benefits as in service for life even after

retirement. However, once confirmed in the service, one should be prohibited from taking up any

private or other government jobs while in service or after retirement or even after resignation from the

service. These safeguards should be relaxed only by the apex board.

The country should take cognisance of all the legitimate needs of these officers and provide them

with the best possible living standards. Instead of salaries, these exceptionally brilliant officers must be

allowed to decide and draw emoluments against performances every month on their own assessment

which include liberal perks such as free education for children in any kind of educational institution, free

educational supports, free medial aid of whatever kind, free club membership and other entertainments,

free foreigh tours, free housing and transportation of whatever kind, help to earn permanent assets, free

supplies of daily needs and other movable properties. Each officer must submit to the apex board a

periodical report of his performances. The board must study each report to judge the officer. It may

warn or take whatever action found necessary.

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The Government is doing nothing to arrest the decline of the All India Services on all fronts.

India is preoccupied with myriad issues of economic and social developments and perhaps the rapid

deterioration of its All India Services does not seem important. But, the Government should realise that

a strong civil service is mandatory for the survival of India and act fast.

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