Rediff.com’s Sheela Bhatt was the first to report about K V Chowdary and Vijai Sharma’s likely appointment as new CVC and CIC respectively.
T M Bhasin, chairman and managing director of Indian Bank, has also been appointed as vigilance commissioner.
Their appointments were approved on Monday by President Pranab Mukherjee, a Rashtrapati Bhavan spokesperson said, a week after Prime Minister Narendra Modi and leader of the Congress in Lok Sabha Mallikarjun Kharge recommended their names.
With Chowdary's appointment, the government has for the first time broken away with the tradition of appointing an Indian Administrative Service officer as the chief of the anti-corruption watchdog since it was formed in 1964.
The appointments have come after opposition leaders including Congress President Sonia Gandhi had attacked the government over keeping these posts vacant and raised questions whether it was afraid of transparency.
Chowdary, a former Indian Revenue Service officer, is working as an Adviser in Supreme Court appointed Special Investigation Team to check black money. He retired as CBDT in October, last year.
When reports appeared that Chowdary's name was cleared, senior lawyers Ram Jethmalani and Prashnat Bhushan criticised the government and questioned his credentials for the job.
In the Central Information Commission, the government has followed the convention of appointing the senior most Information Commissioner's as the CIC.
Sharma, a former Environment Secretary, has been working as Information Commissioner in the Central Information Commissioner since 2012. He will have a tenure of about six months as he attains the age of 65 years on December 1, this year.
Both Chowdary and Bhasin have been appointed for a term of four years from the date on which they enter upon their office or till they attain the age of 65 years, whichever is earlier, an official release said.
Interestingly, former Director General of Central Industrial Security Force Rajiv, who is working as acting Central Vigilance Commissioner, is three batch senior to Chowdary.
Rajiv is a 1975 batch IPS officer, whereas, Chowdary belongs to 1978 batch of IRS (Income Tax cadre).
The Central Vigilance Commission is headed by a CVC and comprises two vigilance commissioners and on Monday’s appointment constitutes the full commission.
In the CIC, there are vacancies of four information commissioners. The incumbents are Basant Seth, Yashovardhan Azad, Sharat Sabharwal, Manjula Prasher, M A Khan Yusufi and Madabhushanam Sridhar Acharyulu.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had attended the meeting for the selection of CIC while Home Minister Rajnath Singh attended the other meeting on CVC, held on June 1.
Central Information Commission, which is mandated to resolve appeals and complaints filed against government departments or public authorities by information seekers under the Right to Information Act, has been working without a chief for over nine months, after the tenure of CIC Rajiv Mathur ended on August 22, 2014.
A total of 40,051 cases -- comprising 32,531 appeals and 7,520 complaints filed under the Right to Information Act -- are pending in the Commission as on today, as per an official data.
The term of Central Vigilance Commissioner Pradeep Kumar had ended on September 28, last year, while Vigilance Commissioner J M Garg completed his tenure on September 7.
A total of 203 applicants were in the race for CIC and the government had received about 130 applications for the two vacant posts (CVC and Vigilance Commissioner) at the anti-corruption watchdog.
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