History
It was set up by theRole
The CVC is not an investigating agency: the only investigation carried out by the CVC is that of examining Civil Works of the Government. Corruption investigations against government officials can proceed only after the government permits order. The CVC publishes a list of cases where permissions are pending, some of which may be more than a year old. The Ordinance of 1998 conferred statutory status to the CVC and the powers to exercise superintendence over the functioning of the Delhi Special Police Establishment, and also to review the progress of the investigations on alleged offences under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 conducted by them. In 1998 the Government introduced the CVC Bill in the Lok Sabha to replace the Ordinance, though it was not successful. The Bill was re-introduced in 1999 and remained with the Parliament until September 2003, when it became an Act after being duly passed in both the Houses of Parliament. The CVC has also been publishing a list of corrupt government officials against which it has recommended punitive action. In 2004, the Union government authorised the CVC as the "Designated Agency" to receive written complaints for disclosure on any allegation of corruption or misuse of office and recommend appropriate action. This report delivers to the president.Appointment
The Central Vigilance Commissioner and the Vigilance Commissioners are appointed by the President on recommendation of a Committee consisting of theRemoval
A member of the commission can be removed from his office only by order of the President on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity after theOrganisation
The Central Vigilance Commission has its own Secretariat, Chief Technical Examiners' Wing (CTE) and a wing of Commissioners for Departmental Inquiries (CDI). As of 21 March 2012, CVC has a staff strength of 257 against sanctioned strength of 299 (including the post of CVC and 2 VCs).Secretariat
The Secretariat consists of a Secretary of the rank of Additional Secretary to the Union government, one officer of the rank of Joint Secretary to the Union government, ten officers of the rank of Director/Deputy Secretary, four Under Secretaries and office staff.Chief Technical Examiners' Wing (CTE)
The Chief Technical Examiners' Organisation constitutes the technical wing of the Central Vigilance Commission and has two Engineers of the rank of Chief Engineers (designated as Chief Technical Examiners) with supporting engineering staff. Following are the main functions of this organisation: * Technical audit of construction works of Governmental organisations from a vigilance angle * Investigating specific cases of complaints relating to construction works * Assisting the CBI in their investigations involving technical matters and for evaluation of properties in Delhi * Assisting the Commission and Chief Vigilance Officers in vigilance cases involving technical matters.Commissioners for Departmental Inquiries (CDI)
There are fourteen posts of Commissioners for Departmental Inquiries (CDI) in the commission, 11 in the rank of Director and 03 in the rank of Deputy Secretary. The CDIs function as Inquiry Officers to conduct inquiries in departmental proceedings initiated against public servants.The Directorate General of Vigilance
The Directorate General of Vigilance, Income Tax is the apex body under the Central Board of Direct Taxes for the vigilance matters. The Directorate General interfaces with the Central Vigilance Commission, the Central Bureau of Investigation, field formations of CBDT who are also having their Vigilance wings and others in all the matters relating to Vigilance, preliminary investigation of complaints, obtaining CVC/CVO's first stage advice, wherever required, assistance to Ministry in issuance of charge sheets, monitoring the charge sheet issued by the Disciplinary authorities in the field, monitoring of progress in inquiry proceedings, processing of enquiry reports, obtaining CVC/CVO's second stage advice, wherever required and communication thereof to Disciplinary authorities and monitoring compliance/implementation of the advice.Central Vigilance Commissioners
The following have held the post of the Central Vigilance Commissioners.Limitations of CVC
* CVC is only an advisory body. Central Government Departments are free to either accept or reject CVC's advice in corruption cases. * CVC does not have adequate resources compared with number of complaints that it receives. It is a very small set up with a sanctioned staff strength of 299, while it is supposed to check corruption in more than 1500 Union departments and ministries. * CVC cannot direct CBI to initiate inquiries against any officer of the level of Joint Secretary and above on its own. Such a permission has to be obtained from the department concerned. However, this provision was declared unconstitutional by Supreme court in 2014. The court had stated that merely the post of a person could not keep him above the law, further stating that section 6 of the Delhi Special Police is violative of fundamental right Article 14. * CVC does not have powers to register criminal case. It deals only with vigilance or disciplinary cases. * CVC has supervisory powers over CBI. However, CVC does not have the power to call for any file from CBI or to direct CBI to investigate any case in a particular manner. CBI is under administrative control of Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT), which means that the powers to appoint, transfer and suspend CBI officers lie with DoPT. * Appointments to CVC are indirectly under the control of the Union government, though the leader of the Opposition (inControversies
Supreme court quashes appointment of CVC
PJ Thomas was appointed as the Chief Vigilance Commissioner in September 2010, on the recommendation of a High Powered Committee (HPC) headed by the Prime Minister. The selection of the new CVC was marked by controversies, after Sushma Swaraj, who was part of three-member selection committee, objected to the choice of Thomas, citing the pending chargesheet against him. A public interest litigation was filed in the Supreme Court by Centre for Public Interest Litigation and India Rejuvenation Initiative. On 3 March 2011, the Supreme Court quashed the appointment of Thomas as the Chief Vigilance Commissioner, noting that the HPC did not consider the relevant materials on the pending chargesheet. Subsequently, Thomas resigned.Whistleblower protection
A few years after the murder of IIT Kanpur alumnus NHAI engineer, the CVC launched an initiative to protect whistleblowers. However, this programme has been criticized by ex-Petition against appointment of K V Chowdary
Before K V Chowdary's appointment, Supreme Court lawyer and Rajya Sabha MPNew initiatives
The following initiatives have been taken by CVC: # National Anticorruption Strategy # Leveraging Technology to Prevent Corruption # Integrity in Public procurement # Awareness Campaign # Provision for Whistle Blowers # Improving the Standard of Vigilance Work # Computerisation of Commission's Work # Modern Preventive Vigilance Framework # International Cooperation. etc.Vigilance Awareness Week
Driven by the Central Vigilance Commission, Vigilance Awareness Week (VAW) is being celebrated every year and coincides with the birthday ofVigilance Awareness Week – Theme for 2019
In 2019, the CVC observed VAW from 28 October 2019 to 2 November 2019 with the theme "Integrity – A way of life" ("ईमानदारी के साथ आत्म निर्भरता").Vigilance Awareness Week – Theme for 2020
The theme for VAW 2020, observed from 27 October to 2 November was "Vigilant India, Prosperous India"Vigilance Awareness Week – Theme for 2021
The theme for VAW 2021 was "Self Reliance with Integrity”.Vigilance Awareness Week – Theme for 2022
The theme for VAW 2022 is "Corruption Free India for a Developed nation"Vigilance Awareness Week – Theme for 2023
The theme for VAW 2023 is "Say no to corruption, commit to the Nation"See also
* Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) * Hawala scandal * Ranjana Kumar * Whistleblower protection in IndiaReferences
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