
Haryana to ‘push again' for promotion of 27 HCS officers to IAS after UPSC returns file
Days after the Union Public Service Commission returned a Haryana government proposal for the elevation of 27 Haryana Civil Services (HCS) officers to the Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officers, senior officials have indicated that 'the state government will give it another shot, factoring in concerns raised by the Commission'.
The state government sent the proposal to the UPSC in March, seeking promotions to 27 HCS officers of 2002, 2003 and 2004 batches to the IAS officers, but the Commission returned the proposal, pointing out 'pending chargesheets' against eight of the 2002 batch HCS officers, Haryana government sources said.
In 2023, the Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) filed a chargesheet in a Hisar court, alleging irregularities in the recruitment of the 2002 batch of HCS officers, impeding the promotion of several HCS officers for the past few years.
However, on Monday, a Haryana government officer said, 'The UPSC has only returned the proposal, but has not taken a final call on it.'
Indicating that 'the proposal will be sent again' to the UPSC, the officer said, 'The matter is under consideration to put up a fresh proposal before the chief minister for his approval.'
The state has three vacancies for the 2020 batch, four for the 2021 batch, eight for the 2022 batch, 10 for the 2023 batch and two for the 2024 batch.
Following a legal opinion, the state government conveyed to the UPSC in March that 'the term chargesheet cannot be construed as the final form/report submitted under section 173 of the CrPC'.
After examining the matter, the UPSC decided to take a legal opinion from the Department of Legal Affairs, and subsequently, the Solicitor General gave his opinion to the commission on May 11.
The Solicitor General did not agree with the state government's opinion that a 'chargesheet cannot be constructed as the final report under section 173 C-PC'.
'All the cases where the report under section 173 CrPC is filed, it would be treated as filing of the chargesheets as stipulated in 'Regulations 5 (5) of the lAS Regulations, 1955,' the Solicitor General opined.
The Solicitor General also mentioned, 'Section 173 is the stage at which the investigation is complete subject to further investigation which can be conducted under section 173(8) of the code… the term 'chargesheet' is not defined in the CrPc, it is used as a legally acceptable expression for the report under section 173 of the code. In some states, it is also called 'challan'. It is this chargesheet which is contemplated in Regulation 5/5/ of the lAS Regulation, 1955. This is clear from the judgment of the Supreme Court in Gurpreet Singh Bhullar & another versus Union Of India & Others. There are other judicial pronouncements on the subject, also. However, with the issue being well settled, it may not be necessary to multiply the citations.'
Given the SG's opinion, the UPSC requested the state government to examine the case and furnish the amended relevant documents so that the proposals for the select lists of 2020 to 2024 are processed further.
Another Haryana government officer said, 'The Solicitor General's opinion will be taken into account while drafting a fresh proposal for the promotion of HCS officers.'
Earlier, opposing the proposal for the promotion of 2002-batch HCS officers, Congress leader and former minister Karan Singh Dalal in March had sent a letter to the President, seeking her intervention into the matter.
In December 2023 too, he had sent a letter to the UPSC chairman, 'opposing' the proposal for the promotion of these officers, adding that the ACB had found the selection of HCS officers of the 2002 batch to be 'tainted'. 'They were also chargesheeted for several offences, including forgery, cheating and corruption. They have been summoned by a Hisar court and are also facing trial,' Dalal had stated.
A former MLA from Palwal, Dalal had earlier challenged the 2002 selection process in the Punjab and Haryana High Court when 86 candidates were selected by the HPSC during the Indian National Lok Dal government's tenure.
The court had found irregularities in the selection process of 38 candidates and ordered the state Vigilance Bureau (now ACB) to examine the entire case. Dalal had also taken up the issue to the Supreme Court.

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2 hours ago
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Do You Know: • The Government recently said the process of data collection for the Census, along with caste enumeration, would commence early next year and give the snapshot of the country's population as on March 1, 2027. The last Census provided population data as on March 1, 2011. The next Census was due in 2020-2021, but was delayed due to Covid pandemic. • The exercise this year will officially begin with a notification announcing the government's intent of conducting the Population Census to be published in an official gazette tentatively on June 16 this year. • The Census would be conducted in two phases — house listing and population count. House listing, the first phase, is expected to take about 5-6 months and the population count, which is the second phase, sources said, is expected to start in February 2027 and will be completed in a month. • The reference date for hilly areas, including the Union Territory of Ladakh, and snow-bound areas of Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand, is October 1, 2026. For the rest of India, it is March 1, 2027. The reference date is the specific point of time for which the data on population is collected. Other Important Articles Covering the same topic: 📍UPSC Issue at a Glance | Census and Delimitation: 4 Key Questions You Must Know for Prelims and Mains 📍Long wait ends, Census by March 2027, will include caste count too Previous year UPSC Prelims Question Covering similar theme: (5) Consider the following statements: (UPSC CSE 2009) 1. Between Census 1951 and Census 2001, the density of the population of India has increased more than three times. 2. Between Census 1951 and Census 2001, the annual growth rate (exponential) of the population of India has doubled. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2 Syllabus: Preliminary Examination: Current events of national importance. Mains Examination: General Studies-III: Government Policies & Interventions, Indigenization of Technology, Defence Technology What's the ongoing story: The Indian Navy will induct nine to 10 warships between June and December 2025, significantly expanding its fleet. The first of these—the Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow-Water Craft (ASW-SWC) Arnala—is scheduled for commissioning on 18 June at the Naval Dockyard in Visakhapatnam. Key Points to Ponder: • Read about the Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow-Water Craft (ASW-SWC) Arnala. • Know about the INS Tamal and INS Tushil. • What is Project 75? • What is the significance of the induction of ASW-SWC Arnala into the Indian Navy? • What is the importance of stealth and anti-submarine capabilities in modern naval warfare? Key Takeaways: • This would significantly bolster India's naval fleet and most of the ships to be commissioned have been made indigenously, officials said. • The Navy said that Arnala's commissioning will mark the formal induction of the first of sixteen ASW-SWC ships into the Indian Navy. These vessels have been designed and constructed by Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers (GRSE), Kolkata, under a Public–Private Partnership with L&T Shipbuilders. • Named after the historic Arnala Fort in Vasai, Maharashtra, Arnala is equipped for a range of anti-submarine warfare operations, including subsurface surveillance, search-and-rescue missions, and low-intensity maritime tasks. • At 77.6 m in length and over 1,490 gross tonnes, Arnala is the largest Indian naval warship to be propelled by a diesel-engine–waterjet combination, the Navy said. • INS Tamal, the second Talwar-class stealth frigate under a 2016 Indo-Russian agreement, is set to be commissioned by the end of this month. Tamal is one of four frigates acquired in a $2.5 billion deal with Russia: two were constructed in Russia, and two at Goa Shipyard Limited (GSL) with Russian technology transfer. Its sister ship, INS Tushil, was commissioned in December 2024 at Russia's Yantar Shipyard and reached India in February 2025. • The Indian Navy aims to become a 175-ship by 2035. An official said that the Navy is close to achieving full self-reliance in warship building and this is showing in the way ships are getting commissioned faster than before. • INS Vagsheer, the sixth Kalvari-class submarine under Project 75, was commissioned in January 2025. This diesel-electric submarine operates underwater on battery power and on the surface using diesel engines, offering silent patrol capability close to the coast. • Staff evaluation and cost negotiations for Project 75I—which will build six advanced conventional attack submarines—are currently under way. Other Important Articles Covering the same topic: 📍Navy launches indigenously-built ship 'Arnala' in Chennai Subscribe to our UPSC newsletter. Stay updated with the latest UPSC articles by joining our Telegram channel – Indian Express UPSC Hub, and follow us on Instagram and X. 🚨 Click Here to read the UPSC Essentials magazine for May 2025. Share your views and suggestions in the comment box or at Roshni Yadav is a Deputy Copy Editor with The Indian Express. She is an alumna of the University of Delhi and Jawaharlal Nehru University, where she pursued her graduation and post-graduation in Political Science. She has over five years of work experience in ed-tech and media. At The Indian Express, she writes for the UPSC section. Her interests lie in national and international affairs, governance, economy, and social issues. You can contact her via email: ... Read More


NDTV
2 hours ago
- NDTV
Canada's New Citizenship Bill: What It Means For Indians, Those Born Abroad
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