In a rare judgment, a special court of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has sentenced three former officials of the Union coal ministry to two years in prison for irregularities in the allocation of a coal block in Madhya Pradesh to a private company in 2006-07. One of the officials served as coal secretary from December 2005 to November 2008 and the other two occupied the posts of joint secretary and director at the time the decision was taken. All three officials belonged to the Indian Administrative Service (IAS), a fact that no doubt is responsible for causing some consternation among top civil servants on how the sentencing could adversely affect the morale of the bureaucracy for having taken the rap for a political decision. Such a conclusion is an overreaction. A closer look at the sequence of events that led to the CBI special court’s order on Monday reveals several flaws in the country’s governance practices. Nor can the bureaucracy completely absolve itself from its failure to strictly and meticulously follow the procedures of decision making or stand up to political pressure by ministers to do something that is incorrect.

