This Article is From Jun 07, 2022

Time To Jail An IAS Officer: Court On Bureaucrats Not Following Orders

A single-judge bench ordered the state on July 19, 2021 to issue a notification within two months of a draft amendment rules regarding merging Group-C with Group-B jobs in the various municipalities of the state.

Time To Jail An IAS Officer: Court On Bureaucrats Not Following Orders

The High Court said "it is time an IAS officer is sent to jail".

Bengaluru:

Expressing displeasure that government officials were not following the orders of the High Court, a division bench of the Karnataka High Court on Monday made an observation that "it's time an IAS officer is sent to jail".

A single-judge bench ordered the state on July 19, 2021 to issue a notification within two months of a draft amendment rules regarding merging Group-C with Group-B jobs in the various municipalities of the state.

An employees association of the Karnataka city municipality workers had filed a contempt petition as the single judge order was not followed.

The matter came up for hearing on May 31, 2022 but the state government had failed to issue the notification.

The High Court had posted the hearing to June 6 and directed Additional Chief Secretary Rakesh Singh of the Urban Development Department and MS Archana, director of Municipal Administration to be present.

On Monday, both the officers were present before the division bench of the court headed by Chief Justice Ritu Raj Awasthi.

Additional Advocate General Dhyan Chinnappa informed the court that the draft rules have been framed and notified on June 3. Objections can be filed within 15 days. An affidavit stating this was submitted to the court.

The court recorded the submission and adjourned the case by six weeks. The court also directed that the officers should be present in court on the next date of hearing too.

During the hearing on Monday, the court observed that officers were not taking court orders seriously. It was because they were summoned to court that the court order was followed to an extent.

The High Court said "it is time an IAS officer is sent to jail", as it made no secret of its displeasure about the behaviour of government officers not following court orders.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

.