CVC should step down: Retired Supreme Court judge
December 1st, 2010 - 4:58 pm ICT by IANSKottayam/New Delhi, Dec 1 (IANS) It would be in the best interests of the country and of the high office he holds if Chief Vigilance Commissioner (CVC) P.J. Thomas steps down, retired Supreme Court judge K.T. Thomas opined Wednesday.
Noting that that the office of the CVC should not be seen as a government office, K.T. Thomas told IANS: “The CVC is meant to tackle corruption and with the apex court now expressing a doubt, it would be good for Thomas himself that he steps down. He can always return when he is cleared.”
“What Thomas can even do is to tell the apex court that he is prepared to step down. If he does so, then he can even get to know what the court thinks of this,” the retired judge maintained.
At the same time, the former judge also said that when he headed a Kerala government committee on self-financing colleges a few years ago, the present CVC was a member of the panel.
“I found him to be a very upright officer.”
Solicitor General Gopal Subramanium Wednesday informed the Supreme Court that CVC Thomas would not be associated in any way with the supervision of the Central Bureau of Investigation’s probe into the 2G spectrum allotment scam.
On Tuesday, a bench of Justices G.S. Singhvi and A.K. Ganguly had expressed reservations on Thomas supervising the probe because, as secretary of the Department of Telecommunications, he had justified certain actions now under the CBI scanner.
Thomas is an accused in the palmoil case that was registered in 1999 when E.K.Nayanar was the chief minister. The other accused, who included former chief minister K.Karunakaran and bureaucrat Jiji Thompson, were charged with hatching a criminal conspiracy that caused a loss of Rs 2.32 crore to the state exchequer by importing 15,000 tonnes of palmoil from Malaysia at an inflated price.
The palmoil case has been heard in various courts in the country, including the Supreme Court, which has stayed its proceedings.
On his part, Thomas said Wednesday he would continue as the CVC despite the Supreme Court’s reservations about him.
“The government appointed me as CVC. I am continuing as CVC,” Thomas told reporters in New Delhi.
“There is some old case and the Supreme Court has already given a stay on it. After looking at everything, the government has appointed me as CVC and I am still the CVC,” Thomas said.
- Court dismisses plea to probe Chandy in palmoil scam - Oct 28, 2011
- Court stops probe against Chandy in palmoil case - Sep 27, 2011
- Palmoline case: Kerala government not averse to re-probe - Oct 18, 2011
- Kerala palmolein scam to be re-investigated - Mar 14, 2011
- Kerala special prosecutor in Palmoil case resigns - Feb 16, 2012
- Appointing Thomas as CVC shows centre's helplessness: Achuthanandan - Sep 27, 2010
- CVC Thomas resigns after Supreme Court tells him to go - Mar 03, 2011
- Supreme Court reserves verdict on CVC's appointment - Feb 11, 2011
- BJP claims victory on PJ Thomas verdict, says Government 'stands exposed' - Mar 03, 2011
- Supreme Court serves notice to CVC Thomas - Dec 06, 2010
- Kerala chief whip petitions against judge - Sep 10, 2011
- Supreme Court order on Thomas not blow to PM: Congress - Mar 03, 2011
- Justice Bedi to monitor Gujarat 'encounters' probe (Lead) - Mar 02, 2012
- Central Vigilance Commissioner Thomas says he will continue - Dec 01, 2010
- Prime Minister takes responsibility for Thomas' appointment as CVC - Mar 04, 2011
Tags: apex court, bureaucrat, central bureau of investigation, chief minister, criminal conspiracy, e k nayanar, ganguly, gopal, government committee, government office, inflated price, j thomas, k karunakaran, kerala government, kottayam, solicitor general, state exchequer, subramanium, supreme court judge, t thomas