Thiruvananthapuram, August 25, 2019: An Indian Administrative Service officer has tendered his resignation saying he wants his freedom of expression back.
“We got into the service thinking that we can provide voice to people, but then we ended up with our own voice being taken away from us,” said Kannan Gopinathan, who was serving as the secretary of the power, urban development and town and country planning departments of the union territory of Dadra and Nagar Haveli, a union territory.
Gopinathan, who joined the service in 2012, was a Arunachal Pradesh-Goa-Mizoram and Union Territory (AGMUT ) cadre. He sent his resignation to the Union Home Secretary on August 21.
He had come to the limelight for his anonymous participation in the flood relief efforts in Kerala last year.
“Over the past few days, I have been really perturbed by what is happening in the country, wherein a large section of our population has had their fundamental rights suspended. There has been a lack of response to it. We seem to be perfectly fine with it. I also see in some small ways how I am also a part of it. I think if I had a newspaper, the only thing I would be printing on the front page would be ‘19’ on the front page, because today is the nineteenth day,” he told The Hindu newspaper.
He hinted at how there has been no response even from within the service to the detaining of former civil servant Shah Faesal, who was the first Kashmiri to secure first in the civil services examination.
“We got into the service thinking that we can provide voice to people, but then we ended up with our own voice being taken away from us. In a democracy, let’s say Hong Kong or any other democracy, if the Government takes a decision, that is their right. But the response to that decision is the people’s right. Here, we have taken a decision and then we have detained everybody. They are not even allowed to respond to that decision. That is dangerous,” he says.
As for his future course of action, he still has not decided anything, as he is still awaiting for a response from the authorities to his resignation.
“I’ve not thought about it at all. I just know that this is not right and I dont want to be in it. That much I am sure of,” says Gopinathan.
Hailing from Kerala’s Kottayam, he completed his schooling from Puthuppally, and later electrical engineering from the Birla Institute of Technology.
During the unprecedented floods that hit Kerala in 2018, he joined the relief efforts at Chengannur. He had kept his identity a secret until, a fellow officer identified him.
Source: thehindu.com