Headlines
No permanent governors in five northeastern states
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By Sujit ChakrabortyAizawl/Agartala, April 2
As many as five
states in India's northeast -- Assam, Mizoram, Meghalaya, Manipur and
Tripura -- do not have permanent governors.
Of these, four are ruled by the Congress party while the Left is in power in Tripura.
Only
Arunachal Pradesh and Nagaland have regular governors. Retired Lt Gen
Nirbhay Sharma is based at Itanagar and Padmanabha Balakrishna Acharya
in Kohima.
Acharya holds the additional charge of Tripura and Assam.
K.K.
Paul, a former Delhi Police chief and then governor of Meghalaya, will
continue to hold the additional charge of Manipur till further orders
though he is the governor of Uttarakhand.
West Bengal Governor
K.N. Tripathi has been asked to discharge the functions of the governor
of Meghalaya. And now he also has to discharge the responsibility in
Mizoram.
Tripathi will be the seventh to hold the post in Mizoram
in less than eight months, albeit temporarily, till the state gets its
own full-fledged governor.
Tripathi will take charge of the state this weekend, Mizoram government spokesman L.R. Sailo told IANS.
Aziz
Qureshi, who took charge as the 15th governor of Mizoram on January 9
after being transferred by President Pranab Mukherjee from Uttarakhand,
has been sacked. His term would have ended in 2017.
Qureshi last
year filed a petition before the Supreme Court alleging the Narendra
Modi government was putting pressure on him to give up his post.
Qureshi's
case was reportedly referred to a five-judge constitutional bench of
the Supreme Court as it involves constitutional law related to removal
of governors. The bench is yet to be formed.
Tempers are running high in Mizoram over the frequent transfers of governors.
This
started with Vakkom B. Purushothaman, who was asked to go to Nagaland
on July 6, 2014, just a month after Modi became the prime minister.
Purushothaman resigned, claiming he was not consulted over his transfer. "Governors cannot be treated like clerks," he said.
Former Gujarat governor Kamla Beniwal was then transferred to Mizoram.
Beniwal took charge on July 9 as the 12th governor of Mizoram. But within a month, she was sacked.
Beniwal had a strained relationship with Modi when he was the Gujarat chief minister.
Former union home secretary Vinod Kumar Duggal, the then governor of Manipur, was given the additional charge of Mizoram.
Duggal assumed office on August 8 but resigned after 20 days.
Maharashtra
governor K. Sankaranarayanan was then transferred to Mizoram on August
24 for the remainder of his term, which was scheduled to end in 2017.
He too quit, blaming the central government for taking a unilateral decision.
Paul was given additional charge of Mizoram and Manipur until his transfer to Uttarakhand.
Politicians,
civil society groups and others in Mizoram are unhappy that the central
government is using the state to "dump" governors.
But the Mizoram government has no issues.
Spokesman
Sailo, also the advisor to Mizoram Chief Minister Lal Thanhawla, said:
"Appointment of a governor in a state is a prerogative of the centre.
Everybody is welcome as the Mizoram governor."
Congress leader
Tapas Dey said the Narendra Modi government had chosen Mizoram as a
"punishment posting" for governors appointed by the previous
Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government.
Dey said: "It is also unbecoming that there are no permanent governors in five of the northeastern states."
With
a population of only 1.1 million, Mizoram has had 15 governors in 28
years after it became the 23rd state of the Indian union in 1987.
(Sujit Chakraborty can be contacted at [email protected])