May 19, 2025 04:15 am (IST)
Follow us:
facebook-white sharing button
twitter-white sharing button
instagram-white sharing button
youtube-white sharing button
Centre picks Shashi Tharoor to head all-party delegation for 'exposing' Pak-backed terrorism globally | Rape convict, survivor express willingness to get married; exchange flowers in Supreme Court | 'Are nukes safe with irresponsible and rogue nation like Pakistan?': Rajnath Singh questions world | 'Go and apologise': Supreme Court slams Madhya Pradesh minister over remark against Colonel Sofiya Qureshi | 'Can timelines be imposed?': President Murmu's question to Supreme Court on Tamil Nadu verdict | 'Had Indira Gandhi been alive, I would've asked her why PoK was not taken back in Simla Agreement': Himanta Biswa Sarma | India's stand demanding vacation of Pak-occupied Kashmir unchanged: MEA | PM Modi visits Adampur Air Base days after Operation Sindoor | Jammu and Kashmir: Three Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorists killed in encounter with security forces in Shopian | US: Two Indian students die in road mishap in Pennsylvania
Sabrangindia

After Verma, Rakesh Asthana moved out of CBI

| @indiablooms | Jan 18, 2019, at 01:30 am

New Delhi, Jan 17 (IBNS): Just week after the removal of Alok Verma as the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) chief, now Rakesh Asthana has been moved out of the probe agency, media reports said on Thursday.

While Verma was supposed to retire on Jan 31, the termination of Asthana's tenure came years ahead of time.

Several other members of Verma's team, including AK Sharma and Manish Sinha, have also been removed.

NDTV quoting sources reported: "The churn is meant to clear the decks for the appointment of a new chief."

A special panel led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi is supposed to select the new CBI boss at a meeting on Jan 24.

Earlier, Verma resigned, three weeks before retirement, refusing to take charge as chief of fire services while the Delhi High Court rejected the plea of Asthana to dismiss the bribery case against him and vacated the interim protection.

Verma's resignation came after a high-powered panel transferred him to the Fire Services as Director General, after deciding that as CBI chief, he had "not acted with the integrity expected of him". His transfer came only two days after the Supreme Court reinstated him as CBI chief.

In October, he had been sent on forced leave by the government in a midnight move in which officers of his team were transferred and an interim director took over. Verma challenged the decision in the Supreme Court,

Verma was to retire on January 31. "Natural justice was scuttled and the entire process was turned upside down in ensuring that the undersigned is removed from the post of the Director," he had said in a statement as he finally  quit.

In another development that ran simultaneously,the Delhi High Court rejected CBI number 2 Rakesh Asthana's plea for dismissal of the bribery case against him.

The High Court also vacated the interim protection against arrest earlier granted in favour of Asthana,  Special Director of the Central agency, saying that the case against him will continue. The CBI has been told to complete investigation in the case against Asthana and others within 10 weeks.

The controversy:

Verma was accused of corruption by Rakesh Asthana in October, when the two officers traded charges in an unprecedented internal feud within  the country's premier investigating agency that came open in public.

Asthana had told the court he was maliciously harassed and there was no evidence against him and the bribery case is a backlash to complaints of criminal misconduct against Alok Verma.

As the government sent both on immediate leave and appointed an interim chief,  Verma approached the Supreme Court, which reinstated him, but with curtailed power.
 

Support Our Journalism

We cannot do without you.. your contribution supports unbiased journalism

IBNS is not driven by any ism- not wokeism, not racism, not skewed secularism, not hyper right-wing or left liberal ideals, nor by any hardline religious beliefs or hyper nationalism. We want to serve you good old objective news, as they are. We do not judge or preach. We let people decide for themselves. We only try to present factual and well-sourced news.

Support objective journalism for a small contribution.
Close menu