Thomas has sent a letter to
Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan and Chief Secretary SM Vijayanand to provide
him adequate protection..
In an unusual action, Kerala Vigilance and
Anti-Corruption Bureau chief and DGP Jacob Thomas, who has taken a tough stand
against corrupt politicians including ex-ministers and bureaucrats, has sought
whistleblowers protection for himself from the Centre.
Thomas has sent a letter to Chief Minister
Pinarayi Vijayan and Chief Secretary SM Vijayanand requesting them to urge the
Centre "to grant him adequate protection from being harassed and put under
any kind of pressure while exposing departmental corruption and irregularities
by public functionaries," official sources said.
According to Whistleblowers Protection Act 2011,
the "Central government shall ensure that no person or a public servant
who has made a disclosure under this Act is victimised by initiation of any
proceedings or otherwise merely on the ground that such person or a public
servant had made a disclosure or rendered assistance in inquiry under this
Act." The Act, which received Presidential assent on May 9, 2014, also
states that if any person was being victimised or likely to be victimised for
making disclosures or rendered assistance under the Act, he may, file an
application before the Competent Authority seeking redress in the matter.
"And such authority shall take such action,
as deemed fit and may give suitable directions to the concerned public servant
or the public authority, as the case may be, to protect such person from being
victimised or avoid his victimisation," it says.
The demand of the senior most IPS officer in the
state assumes significance in the wake of a series of inquiries launched by the
anti-corruption watchdog, including those against some top
bureaucrats.Interestingly, Thomas was the first IPS officer in the state to get
whistleblowers protection from the Union government in 2005 after he brought to
light corruption in the Kerala State Civil Supplies Corporation while serving
as its managing director.
Advocate DB Binu, a state-based RTI activist,
said even two years after the much-awaited Whistleblowers Protection Act came
into existence, it was yet to be fully operational in the country. "There
is no concrete system to protect whistleblowers in our country right now. If a
person gets threat and harassment for whistleblowing a corruption, will anybody
else be ready to follow his footsteps?" he said.
"Whistleblowers play a significant role in
anti-corruption drives. They face lot of threats and harassment while exposing
corruption. This is much high in the case if an insider, who whistleblows about
the corruption of a system by standing within it," he said.
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