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The silent successor
Perhaps the first thing Ramesh Chandra Sharma did after occupying the chair
of Director, the Central Bureau of Investigations (CBI), was remove the
Xerox machine from the room.
It was the machine that his predecessor allegedly used for ``systematically
leaking'' information.
An antithesis of his flamboyant predecessor, media-wary Sharma has often
taken refuge in the plea that media scrutiny hampers his work. Accessible,
he is, but taking the cue from the rather unceremonious exit of Joginder
Singh, Sharma is trying to do what Singh had declared before the Supreme
Courtto become a total recluse. The contrast between the two is not just in
the attitude towards the Press but even in the style of functioning.
Learning a lesson from the criticism Singh drew for calling on politicians
of every hue immediately after taking over, Sharma called on only the
Minister of State for Personnel on his first day in the new office. Later,
he proceeded to hold a series of meetings with his officers. Courtesy calls
were reserved for the next day. Sharma's detractors, however, see it as an
expression of his ``pro-establishment attitude'' and to drive home the
point, they cite an instance where Sharma spoke out in favour of the
controversial single-point directive at a CBI conference.
Controversies frequented Sharma regularly. His handling of high-profile
cases such as Bofors and the HDW submarine deal came under a cloud, so did
his uneasy truce with his erstwhile boss Joginder Singh and his promotion as
the CBI chief during an extension. Says BJP leader Yashwant Sinha: ``The
transfer of Joginder Singh was essentially a political transfer to keep
Laloo (Prasad Yadav) in good humour. And the choice of R.C. Sharma is
politically convenient for Congress which is facing the heat in Bofors and
Rs 4,600-crore nationalised bank scam. Moreover, the timing of the transfer
makes it even more suspect.''
A true blue product of the cast iron bureaucracy, Sharma prefers to play
strictly by the booka practice which fetched him both bouquets and
brickbats. While within the organisation he is respected for being a
hard-core professional, outside he has earned the ire of the media and
politicians alike for adopting dilatory tactics in politically sensitive
cases. He was accused of sitting on the Bofors case for five years.
Criticised for his proximity to certain Congress leaders, Sharma shrugs it
off as a professional hazard as one will always have political bosses. On
the Bofors probe, his defence is that when he took over the case two years
had gone by and the case had reached a near dead-end. He says the CBI had
lost all the cases in the High Court and the Swiss government had closed the
inquiry. Instead of sabotaging, Sharma says, he revived the case but it went
unnoticed as he didn't ``make any noise about it''.
Says former CBI director Vijay Karan who had transferred the case to R.C.
Sharma, ``There was no political pressure and neither is Sharma amenable to
political machinations. But I do have reservations about the timing of the
appointment of new director in the absence of his predecessor''.
Though Sharma by and large commands unflinching loyalty within his own
organisation, evident in the way his taking over was celebrated by peons and
officers alike, he has his fair share of detractors outside the agency.
``His transfer of N.R. Wasan who was heading the Bofors team soon after
taking over is very disquieting,'' observed a senior government official.
The Sharmas moved from west Pakistan to Delhi during partition when Ramesh
Chandra was seven. He had his schooling in the Capital and went to
Chandigarh for college. That was where he came across a teacher who became
an ``abiding influence in his life.'' He wanted to be an economist like his
professor, former Finance Minister Manmohan Singh, but was nudged into a
career in the services by his mother who didn't want him to go abroad or
face financial hardships.
The ``reluctant cop'' donned the uniform in 1963. Handpicked by K.F.
Rustamji, founding father of the Border Security Force, Sharma, then 28,
became the BSF's youngest commandant, an assignment which he still considers
one of his best.
Among the other posts he held were that of the SP, Shah Commission,
Director, Police Training College, Karnal -- where he trained the first
batch of women recruitsand that of Additional Commissioner of the Special
Investigative Team probing the assassination of Indira Gandhi.
A fitness freak, Sharma devotes a couple of hours every day to his favourite
sport, golf. An avid reader, he likes Urdu poetry and he has even written a
book on police training. For Sharma, the most important posting came after
his career was over, almost. However, his elevation as the chief of the
country's premier investigative agency is being seen inside the CBI
headquarters as a ``belated recognition''.
The transfers he ordered and his statement that arrests would be made an
exception and not the rule, may have already sent political signals. But his
coming seven months in the office under the unrelenting surveillance of the
Opposition and the media are not going to be easy especially if the agenda
is, as Sharma says, is ``follow the book.''
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