Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghose India's First Lokpal
New
Delhi: Former
Supreme Court judge Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghose was on Tuesday, 19th
March 2019, appointed as the country's first Lokpal, the anti-corruption
ombudsman.
The appointment has come through five years after the Lokpal Act was notified
for effecting a panel of ombudsmen to look into cases of corruption and
maladministration by public servants.
A selection committee, comprising the Prime Minister, Chief Justice of India ,
Lok Sabha Speaker and an eminent jurist, finalised Justice Ghose's name in a
meeting last week after the Supreme Court set a deadline.
Former Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) chief Archana
Ramasundaram, ex-Maharashtra Chief Secretary Dinesh Kumar Jain, Mahender Singh
and Indrajeet Prasad Gautam have been appointed as non-judicial members of
Lokpal, according to an official communique.
Justices
Dilip B Bhosale, Pradip Kumar Mohanty, Abhilasha Kumari and Ajay Kumar Tripathi
have been appointed as judicial members in the anti-corruption ombudsman, the
statement by Rashtrapati Bhavan said.
These
appointments were recommended by Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led selection
committee and approved by President Ram Nath Kovind. "The above
appointments will take effect from the dates they assume charge of their
respective offices," it said.
Justice Ghose, 66, retired as Supreme Court judge in May 2017 after a tenure of
four years. He is a member of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) since
June 29, 2017.
What makes the Lokpal powerful is the authority under the law to investigate
complaints against current and former prime ministers, Union ministers, members
of Parliament, government employees and employees of public sector
undertakings, and key employees of non-governmental organisations receiving
more than Rs 10 lakh a year in foreign contributions, among others.
The Lokpal has to work in tandem with the Central Vigilance Commission, it can
direct any investigating agency, including the CBI, to look into allegations of
graft under the Prevention of Corruption Act.
The appointment of Justice Ghose, however, has kicked up a controversy with the
process not having a voice of the opposition.
Congress
leader in the Lok Sabha Mallikarjun Kharge was called in as a special invitee
to the selection committee meeting but he refused to attend. Kharge pointed
that a special invitee would not have any rights to vote and that the
opposition was being made "voiceless" in a critical matter.