West Bengal Minister Partha Chatterjee appears before CBI in recruitment scam
The Hindu
Partha Chatterjee was the State Education Minister when the alleged appointments were made
The Trinamool Congress government is feeling the heat of the alleged irregularities in recruitment carried by the West Bengal School Service Commission (WBSSC) with senior Minister Partha Chatterjee on Wednesday appearing before the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).
Earlier in the day, Justice Abhijit Gangopadhyay of Calcutta High Court directed Mr. Chatterjee, Minister of Industries and Commerce and secretary-general of the State’s ruling party, to appear before the central agency by 6 p.m. Mr. Chatterjee appeared at the Nizam Palace office of the CBI by about 5.40 p.m.
The directive to the Minister to appear before the agency came after a division Bench of the Calcutta High Court on Wednesday upheld orders of a single Bench that directed CBI to inquire into the alleged illegal appointments given by the WBSSC. Earlier in April, the Minister was asked to appear before the agency by Justice Gangopadhyay in connection with allegations of irregularities in recruitment of Group-D staff, and a division Bench had stayed his appearance by five weeks. During the day, the Minister approached a higher Bench but was not granted any reprieve by the High Court.
On Wednesday, the division Bench of Justice Subrata Talukdar and Justice Anand Kumar Mukherjee described the irregularities in appointments of teaching and non-teaching staff by WBSSC as a “public scam” and added that the single Bench of Justice Gangopadhyay was not wrong in ordering a probe into the alleged money trail involved. Partha Chatterjee was the State Education Minister when the alleged appointments were made.
Justice Gangopadhyay had also held that a five-member committee appointed by the Minister to oversee the appointment process for recruitment of teachers for classes 9 and 10, and group-C and D staff in government-aided schools was illegal. On Wednesday, two members of the advisory committee also appeared before the CBI.
On Tuesday, the Bench of Justice Gangopadhyay directed the CBI to interrogate West Bengal Minister of State for Education, Paresh Chandra Adhikari over the appointment of his daughter as a teacher in a State-run school. Justice Abhijit Gangopadhyay directed that the Minister should appear before the CBI authorities by Tuesday evening for interrogation over the allegations. While Mr. Adhikari had left Cooch Behar in north Bengal to come to Kolkata, he did not appear before the agency on Wednesday. His whereabouts were not known till the evening.
Paresh Chandra Adhikari was associated with All India Forward Bloc and was the Food Minister in the Left Front government before he joined the Trinamool Congress in 2018. The appointment of Mr. Adhikari’s daughter as a teacher in the State-run school came months after the Minister joined the State’s ruling party.
“We are judges and therefore, cannot act like Mughals of a bygone era ... the writ courts in the guise of doing justice cannot transcend the barriers of law,” the High Court of Karnataka observed while setting aside an order of a single judge, who in 2016 had extended the lease of a public premises allotted to a physically challenged person to 20 years contrary to 12-year period stipulated in the law.
The High Court of Karnataka on Monday declined to interfere, at present, in the investigation against a Bharatiya Janata Party worker, who is among the accused persons facing charges of circulating obscene clips, related to “morphed” images and videos clips related to Prajwal Revanna, former Hassan MP, in public domain through pen drives and other modes.
The 16th edition of Bhoomi Habba was held on June 8, at the Visthar campus. The festival drew a vibrant crowd who came together to celebrate eco-consciousness through a variety of engaging activities, creative workshops, panel discussions, interactive exhibits and performances, all centered around this year’s theme: “Save Water, Save Lives.”