Crisis Management & Disaster Response
As a civil services officer of the state, what would be the order in which you would rescue these people and why? Give justifications. (200 words, 20 marks)
T2: Constitutional impartiality (Art. 14 — equal protection) vs. political and administrative pressure to prioritise the party president and ACS.
T3: Team safety in difficult terrain vs. speed of rescue — every hour means more lives lost.
Constitutional: Art. 14 — equal protection under law. Art. 21 — right to life; the state has an obligation to protect every citizen equally, including the right to emergency assistance. Paschim Banga Khet Mazdoor Samity v. State (1996) — Art. 21 includes the right to emergency medical care.
Administrative: NDMA guidelines and DM Act, 2005 — rescue priority based on vulnerability, not status.
This case tests the principle of impartiality in emergency resource allocation — whether a civil servant maintains triage ethics based on humanitarian urgency or yields to political and administrative status.
Ethical foundation: The rescue order must be determined by triage ethics — urgency, vulnerability, and the state's constitutional obligation of equal protection under Article 14. Article 21 establishes the right to life, which the Supreme Court in Paschim Banga Khet Mazdoor Samity (1996) held includes the right to emergency medical care. NDMA guidelines under the Disaster Management Act, 2005 mandate need-based, not status-based, resource allocation.
My rescue priority order:
First — Patients with acute medical emergencies. Time-critical survival cases — trauma, obstetric emergencies, cardiac events. Every hour reduces survival probability. The state's emergency medical duty under Art. 21 is most urgent here.
Second — Women and children, elderly, differently abled. Highest vulnerability and lowest capacity for self-rescue. Ethics of Care places those with greatest dependency first.
Third — Pilgrims and tourists in large exposed groups. Unfamiliar with terrain, without local networks. Maximising the number rescued per rescue unit is the utilitarian logic here.
Fourth — Hikers. Generally fit, terrain-aware, with equipment — capable of partial self-rescue with guidance from rescue teams.
Fifth — The ruling party's regional president and the Additional Chief Secretary of a neighbouring state. They rank fifth not because their lives matter less, but because Article 14 prohibits preferential treatment based on political or administrative status in emergency resource allocation. Placing officials first would be a constitutional violation of impartiality. They are also more likely to have communication resources and support personnel.
Sixth — Prisoners. Under state custodial care — manage in place with provisions delivered; elevate if the jail facility faces direct structural threat.
Reform: NDMA should publish and train all district officials on a standardised triage protocol that explicitly prohibits status-based rescue prioritisation and is regularly rehearsed in disaster drills — removing ambiguity and resistance to impartial allocation during actual emergencies.
What would you have done in such a situation? Justify your action. (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Legal duty as a witness vs. commercial/career stakes.
This case is less a dilemma than a test of character — the answer is clear, and the reasoning must be stated without hesitation.
What I would do: I would stop immediately. Provide first aid within my capacity — control bleeding, keep the injured conscious and comfortable, ensure they are not in danger from traffic. Call the emergency services (112) and the nearest hospital simultaneously. Stay until professional help arrives or I can hand over responsibility to another competent adult. Then — only then — call the UPSC and explain the emergency, requesting accommodation.
Why there is no real dilemma: The IAS interview is an aspiration. The mother and child's lives are an immediate Art. 21 obligation. Every human and every ethical framework — utilitarian, Kantian, Virtue Ethics, Ethics of Care — points in the same direction. Virtue ethics is most apt: the person of excellent character does not even experience this as a difficult choice. Good Samaritan Law (Motor Vehicles Act, 2019 amendment) legally protects me from liability for providing first aid — removing even the technical hesitation about "interference."
On the interview: UPSC has made accommodations for genuine emergencies in exceptional cases. If it does not on this occasion, I would apply again — the civil service is a lifetime commitment; a single interview date is not its measure. A civil service that would not want an officer who stopped to save an injured mother is not the civil service worth joining.
Concluding principle: The qualities UPSC is testing in that interview room — compassion, duty, character — are demonstrated first in this moment, on that road.
In such trying circumstances, what will be your response? Examine the qualities of a public servant that will be required to manage the situation. (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Moral courage (continuing under adverse conditions) vs. practical risk management (team must be functional to rescue effectively).
T3: The angry locals as aggressors vs. as victims — responding to the anger with understanding rather than punitive action.
This case tests moral courage and leadership under compound pressure — physical danger, team demoralisation, and public hostility simultaneously, while thousands depend on continued operations.
Ethical issues: The central tension is between the duty of care to my rescue team — who have legitimate safety concerns after a violent assault — and the duty of care to thousands of disaster victims whose lives depend on operations continuing. Both are real obligations. A third dimension is the nature of the local anger: it is not malicious — it is the desperation of people who have been without food and water, with damaged supply routes, watching a rescue operation they perceive as inadequate. Understanding this changes the response from punitive to communicative.
Ethical anchor: Virtue Ethics is central here — what does a person of excellent character, moral courage, and good judgement do? They do not abandon the public they are serving, but they do not pretend the team's danger is irrelevant either. Utilitarian triage logic applies: the harm of calling off operations (thousands suffer longer) exceeds the harm of continuing with protection measures (team exposed to manageable risk with police presence).
My response: I would not call off operations. First, evacuate the injured team member for immediate medical care — this is non-negotiable. Second, address the local community directly and personally: acknowledge their anger, explain the constraints (damaged routes, resource limits), commit to specific visible next steps, and ask for their help. Anger born of desperation often converts to cooperation when it is met with transparency rather than enforcement. Third, request police presence to protect the team while operations resume. Fourth, brief my superiors on the violence and request additional NDRF support.
Qualities required: Moral courage — the willingness to continue a duty despite personal and team risk. Emotional intelligence — reading the locals' anger as desperation, not malice, and responding accordingly. Resilience — maintaining operational focus under conditions of personal stress and uncertainty. Compassion — for both the team and the victims, simultaneously.
Reform: NDRF teams should include trained community liaison officers who can engage affected populations in their own language and build trust during operations — preventing the communication vacuum that turns desperate victims into inadvertent threats to rescue teams.
(a) In your opinion, what ethical issues arose in the current migrant crisis?
(b) What do you understand by an ethical care giving state?
(c) What assistance can the civil society render to mitigate the sufferings of migrants in similar situations? (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Sudden policy action (necessary speed) vs. managed transition (necessary for the most vulnerable).
T3: State border controls vs. citizens' right to move freely within India.
(1) Ethical issues in the migrant crisis: Five distinct ethical failures converged. First, the right to advance notice — a sudden lockdown without any transition period for the most economically vulnerable population violated their right to prepare. This is a failure of procedural justice. Second, the right to livelihood under Art. 21 — the Supreme Court has held that the right to life includes the right to livelihood; denying wages and stranding workers without income was a direct violation. Third, dignity in displacement — images of workers walking hundreds of kilometres, carrying children on their backs, being stopped at state borders, subjected to chemical spraying, represent a catastrophic failure of the state's duty to protect human dignity. Fourth, the invisibility of informal labour in policy design — the lockdown was designed around formal economic activity; the 90% informal labour force was structurally invisible in the planning, which is itself an ethical failure of governance. Fifth, inter-state coordination failure — state borders became barriers to citizens' movement (Art. 19(1)(d) — right to move freely throughout India), with different states imposing conflicting rules.
(2) What is an ethical caregiving state? An ethical caregiving state treats every citizen — including the most economically marginalised — as equally deserving of protection during a crisis. It does not merely respond to suffering after it has become visible; it anticipates vulnerability and acts before the crisis deepens. An ethical caregiving state would have: established shelter and food in cities before announcing a lockdown; arranged transport or wages before withdrawing livelihoods; created a real-time registration system for migrant workers (which did not exist) to enable rapid assistance; communicated clearly and in the workers' languages. The Indian state's response improved over time — Shramik Special Trains were launched, ration entitlement was extended — but the initial failure was structural, not merely logistical.
(3) Civil society assistance: Civil society filled the gap the state initially left. NGOs ran community kitchens, distributed dry rations, provided shelter. Student volunteers guided workers through state border checkpoints. Legal aid organisations filed PIL petitions on wage payment. Community health workers provided medical support along walking routes. The lesson is institutionalised: the 2005 DM Act's provisions for civil society integration in DDMA frameworks need to be operationalised in advance, not improvised during a crisis. A pre-registered civil society activation protocol, with defined roles and coordination authority, would allow faster and more effective mobilisation in future pandemics.
Reform: A National Migrant Worker Database — biometrically linked, updated in real time — would enable targeted crisis support, portable PDS benefits, and rapid transport coordination without the registration bottlenecks that made 2020's response so slow. This is Mission Karmayogi-level institutional design, not a temporary fix.
You are appointed as the District Collector of Rampura.
(a) Identify the ethical issues involved.
(b) Which specific steps will you initiate to ameliorate the conditions of minor girls of your district and to improve the overall economic scenario in the district? (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Enforcement against child labour (punitive) vs. addressing structural poverty (root cause).
T3: Compromised NGOs (civil society safety net has failed) vs. the DC's limited administrative capacity.
(1) Ethical issues: Four distinct ethical failures are visible. Child labour and exploitation — minor girls working in Bt Cotton farms violates the Child Labour (Prohibition & Regulation) Act, 1986 (amended 2016), Art. 24, and the JJ Act, 2015. The UPSC has held that child labour is a rights violation regardless of economic necessity — poverty does not create an exemption. Structural poverty as a governance failure — the parents sending their daughters are not making a free choice; they are responding to a poverty that the state has failed to address. This makes the state a co-responsible actor, not merely a regulator. The health dimension — poor living and working conditions causing serious health problems to minors is an Art. 21 violation. Finally, compromised NGOs — organisations that should be advocating for these girls are complicit in or inactive about their exploitation, eliminating the civil society safety net.
(2) Specific steps:
Immediate (0–30 days): Coordinate with counterpart DC in the destination state to inspect and document working conditions of Rampura girls. Initiate rescue and rehabilitation through DCPU (District Child Protection Unit) under JJ Act. Issue notices to known labour contractors. File FIR against contractors violating CLPRA. Withdraw funding from compromised NGOs pending audit; identify credible grassroots organisations as alternatives.
Short-term (1–6 months): Ensure all rescued girls are enrolled in schools under RTE Act — address drop-out reasons with conditional cash transfers (DBT). Launch MGNREGA-based women's livelihood programme so mothers have an income source that eliminates the economic push factor. Survey the district for Anganwadi coverage gaps — address nutritional vulnerability that compounds poverty-driven decisions. Establish a district child labour task force with multi-departmental coordination.
Medium-term (6–24 months): Engage Gram Sabhas under PESA Act, 1996 — tribal communities must be participants in development decisions, not passive recipients. Create district-level skill training centres for youth to break the inter-generational poverty cycle. Launch social audit of existing welfare schemes — much of the existing allocation may not be reaching the most vulnerable due to leakage.
Reform: A real-time district child labour tracker — linked to school attendance records and MGNREGA employment data — would allow early identification of families at risk of sending children to work, enabling preventive intervention before the cycle begins.
(a) Assume you are the CEO of the company. What would you do to diffuse the volatile situation on the date of gate crashing with the violent mob sitting inside the company premises?
(b) What can be the long-term solution to the issue discussed in the case? (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: The company's right to merit-based hiring (Art. 19(1)(g)) vs. the community's legitimate interest in local employment.
T3: Speed of resolution (employees need the situation resolved) vs. not setting a precedent that rewards gate-crashing.
(a) Immediate defusion — what I would do as CEO: My first priority is the safety of 700 employees — not the corporate position. I would immediately call the police (this is criminal trespass and threatening under IPC) and district administration. While waiting, I would personally meet the group's leader — calmly, without conceding anything — and state: "You have made your request heard. I will formally acknowledge it. Please allow my employees to work safely while I process this through proper channels." This separates the immediate physical crisis from the substantive demand. I would simultaneously direct HR to move non-essential staff away from the immediate area and ensure that the 40 persons are contained in one part of the facility under police supervision when they arrive. I would not make any oral commitment on employment — verbal promises under duress are both dishonest and contractually void.
(b) Long-term solution: Three parallel tracks. First, a formal written response to the political party leadership — acknowledging their concern for local employment, explaining the company's actual hiring process, and inviting them to encourage local candidates to apply through the documented procedure. This creates a record and a legitimate channel. Second, review the company's CSR policy — if the company operates in this area, it has an obligation under Companies Act, 2013 to invest in local skill development. A CSR-funded local training programme that feeds into the company's hiring pool converts an adversarial dynamic into a constructive partnership. Third, engage the district administration for a structured local employment protocol — not a favour-based quota but a transparent local candidate recruitment track.
(c) Consequences of each approach: Yielding to demands under duress: immediate relief but a standing invitation for repeat extortion — every competitor and political group will replicate the tactic. Calling police without engagement: legally correct but risks escalation if police response is delayed and the 700 employees remain at risk during the gap. Combination approach (call police + engage leader + formal CSR channel): short-term discomfort for the group, but long-term credibility for the company and an actual path for local employment that is defensible to all stakeholders. This is the right approach.
(a) What are the criteria you would use to deploy the available hospital resources, and what is the justification for these criteria?
(b) If yours is a private hospital, whether your justification and decision would remain the same as that of a public hospital? (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Public hospital vs. private hospital — different legal obligations but identical professional ethics.
T3: Triage of resource allocation (beds, oxygen, ambulances) — urgency vs. survivability.
(a) Criteria and justification for staff deployment: The four bioethical principles — non-maleficence, beneficence, autonomy, and justice — provide the framework. Applied to a pandemic resource crisis:
Clinical staff deployment criteria: First, clinical competence — staff with relevant training for COVID patient care are deployed to COVID wards; deploying untrained staff risks both patient harm and higher staff infection rates, compounding the shortage. Second, risk stratification — staff with co-morbidities (immunocompromised, elderly, pregnant) are assigned to non-COVID roles where possible; this is beneficence applied to the caregiver. Third, informed consent — staff should be informed of risks and given protective equipment before deployment; autonomy applies to healthcare workers too. Fourth, rotational scheduling — no individual bears continuous exposure; this is both ethical (protecting the caregiver) and practical (preventing burnout-driven breakdown of the entire team).
Non-clinical staff deployment: Administrative, housekeeping, and logistics staff can be trained in limited functions — patient transport within hospital, supply management, non-contact family communication. Training must precede deployment. They must not be deployed for direct patient contact without PPE and basic infection control training.
Bed and oxygen allocation: Applied triage — prioritise patients with the highest medical urgency and reasonable survivability with treatment. A ventilator allocated to a patient with near-zero survival probability denies it to a patient who would survive with it. This is ethically defensible — it is not abandonment, it is optimal allocation under scarcity. Document every allocation decision and the clinical reasoning behind it.
(b) Does it differ for private vs public hospitals? The ethical principles are identical — bioethics is not conditional on hospital ownership. A private hospital has the same professional duties of non-maleficence, beneficence, and justice. However, the legal obligations differ: under the Epidemic Diseases Act (amended 2020) and State DM Act provisions, state governments directed private hospitals to maintain COVID beds and oxygen for public use — making their resource allocation a matter of public law, not private discretion. A private hospital administrator who diverts resources to paying patients over critical non-paying patients during a declared epidemic is not merely acting unethically — they may be acting illegally. The ethical answer is the same for both: clinical need determines allocation.
Being a physician who has graduated from AIIMS, you know that blood for transfusion needs to be procured only through a recognised blood bank. Your team members are divided on this issue; some favour transfusion, while others oppose it. The doctors in the team are ready to facilitate the delivery provided they are not penalised for transfusion. Now you are in a dilemma. Your professional training emphasises prioritising service to humanity and saving lives of individuals.
(a) What are the ethical issues involved in this case?
(b) Evaluate the options available to you, being District Magistrate of the area. (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Medical team's professional liability concern (acting without legal authorisation) vs. their duty of non-maleficence (woman dies without action).
T3: DM's dual role — legal administrator bound by rules, and physician trained to save lives — both competencies point in the same direction here.
This case presents one of the most direct tensions in public administration ethics: the letter of a protective law appearing to stand between a civil servant and saving a life.
Ethical issues: The blood bank requirement exists to protect patients from incompatible or infected blood — a valid public health purpose. But in this field situation, the protective purpose can be served: test kits are available in the ambulance, volunteer donors are present, and trained doctors are ready. The law's protective function does not require a blood bank building — it requires compatible, tested blood administered by trained personnel. A second tension is the medical team's professional liability: they will not proceed without formal protection, and they should not have to. A third issue is the dual identity of the DM-physician: both professional obligations point toward action.
Ethical anchor: Article 21 — the right to life — is the constitutional anchor. The Supreme Court has held that the right to life includes the right to emergency medical care (Paschim Banga, 1996). The DM Act, 2005 confers extraordinary powers for exactly this scenario — Sections 30, 33, and 34 allow district authorities to direct any person or resource in a disaster situation. The bioethical principle of non-maleficence — first, do no harm — here means that doing nothing causes the greatest harm.
Option evaluation: Strict legal refusal results in a preventable death — this cannot be the right answer. Proceeding informally without authorising the team exposes them to professional liability and is not the DM's prerogative. The correct option is to issue a formal written emergency order under the DM Act, documenting the life-threatening necessity, the availability of testing equipment, the donor compatibility testing, and the trained personnel — thereby providing legal protection to the medical team while exercising the extraordinary powers that the DM Act was designed to confer.
My decision: I would issue the written emergency order immediately and simultaneously call for the nearest blood bank to dispatch to the site. The documentation would be completed on the spot, in whatever form available — hand-written if necessary. The woman's life and the medical team's legal protection are both secured within the constitutional framework.
Vijay got a message from his hometown in Kerala that his mother was seriously sick. After two days Vijay received the unfortunate message that his mother has expired. Vijay has no close relative except one elder sister who is a US citizen and has been staying there for several years. In the meantime, the situation in the affected district deteriorated further due to resumption of heavy rains after a gap of five days. At the same time, continuous messages were coming on his mobile from his hometown to reach at the earliest for performing last rites of his mother.
(a) What are the options available with Vijay?
(b) What are the ethical dilemmas being faced by Vijay?
(c) Critically evaluate and examine each of these options identified by Vijay.
(d) Which of the options do you think would be most appropriate for Vijay to adopt and why? (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Personal grief (Vijay is a human being who just lost his mother) vs. the reality that the flooding does not stop for his grief.
T3: Leaving briefly vs. the absence creating a leadership vacuum at the most critical moment.
(b) Ethical dilemmas: Vijay faces three genuine tensions simultaneously. Filial duty — the deepest personal obligation in most cultures — conflicts with public duty — the constitutional obligation to the 5,000 injured and the thousands still at risk. A second tension is between cultural and religious obligations around last rites — which have a time dimension — and an operational crisis where his departure could cost additional lives. A third tension is personal grief: Vijay is a human being who has just lost his mother and is simultaneously managing a catastrophe. Both realities are legitimate.
(a) & (c) Options evaluated:
Option A — Leave immediately for last rites. The emotional pull is understandable. But 5,000 injured and renewed flooding mean operational leadership is not merely administrative — it is life-and-death. The next senior officer may not have Vijay's district knowledge. The gap in leadership at this exact moment, with renewed floods, is a real risk to real lives. Cost: lives potentially lost in leadership vacuum. This option, however understandable, is the wrong choice given the specific operational moment.
Option B — Arrange last rites through sister abroad and local trusted relatives; remain at post. Last rites can be conducted by a trusted relative — the cultural obligation can be met without Vijay's physical presence, and in many traditions, the circumstances of extraordinary duty are themselves considered a legitimate reason for absence. Vijay should call his sister in the US, explain the situation, ask her to coordinate arrangements. He should take ten minutes — not hours — to grieve privately. He should inform his superiors of the situation, request any available support, and continue. Cost: personal grief without the comfort of ritual presence. This cost must be borne with dignity.
Option C — Seek immediate replacement and then leave. If a senior officer of equivalent or greater competence can take over within hours, this option balances both obligations. But "within hours" is critical — during a renewed flood with 5,000 injured, the transition cannot be leisurely.
(d) Most appropriate option: Option B — remain at post — is the most appropriate, with the fullest human acknowledgment of what that costs. Vijay's mother would likely have understood the weight of what her son carries. The public trust invested in a DC during a district's worst disaster is not transferable at will. The 5,000 injured and the incoming flood have no alternative. Vijay does — not an easy alternative, but a possible one. He should arrange the rites, inform his superiors, grieve in the margins of a night that will be sleepless regardless, and continue.
Concluding principle: The civil service oath is not taken in the abstract. It is redeemed in moments exactly like this one — where duty costs something real, and is upheld anyway.
(i) Money not disbursed to actual job-seekers.
(ii) Muster Rolls of the Labourers not properly maintained.
(iii) Mismatch between the work done and payments made.
(iv) Payments made to fictitious persons.
(v) Job Cards were given without looking into the need of the person.
(vi) Mismanagement of funds and to the extent of siphoning of funds.
(vii) Approved works that never existed.
(a) What is your reaction to the above situation and how do you restore the proper functioning of the MGNREGA Programme in this regard?
(b) What actions would you initiate to solve the various issues listed above?
(c) How would you deal with the above situation? (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Accountability for the predecessor (colleague, possibly politically connected) vs. the rights of actual MGNREGA beneficiaries.
T3: Restoration (getting the scheme working correctly) vs. punishment (pursuing the fraud).
(a) My reaction and restoring proper functioning: My immediate reaction is not administrative — it is ethical. The rural poor who were entitled to 100 days of guaranteed employment under the MGNREGA Act, 2005 have been robbed of both their wages and their rights. Fictitious muster rolls and ghost job cards mean real families went without income that was legally theirs. This is not a paperwork irregularity — it is a violation of Art. 21 (right to livelihood) and the statutory right created by the MGNREGA. My first action is to freeze further disbursal from the panchayat's MGNREGA account pending audit. Simultaneously, I would direct the District Programme Coordinator to conduct an immediate physical verification of all job card holders — matching biometric data against names, photographing actual households, and identifying fictitious entries. I would order a social audit — under MGNREGA's built-in social audit mechanism — to be conducted in the panchayat within 30 days, with Gram Sabha involvement.
(b) Actions against each specific fraud: Falsified muster rolls and fictitious payments — FIR against the responsible Gram Panchayat officials under relevant IPC sections (cheating, misappropriation) and Prevention of Corruption Act. Unverified job cards — cancel all fraudulent cards after physical verification; issue proper cards to genuine eligible households through re-survey. Non-existent approved works — site visits to document; file for cost recovery from contractors who certified works that were never done; report to CAG. Siphoned funds — compute the total amount, initiate recovery proceedings against responsible officials, and report to the State MGNREGA authority and Ministry of Rural Development.
(c) Overall approach: Two simultaneous tracks — accountability for the past, and restoration for the present. Accountability: FIR, vigilance inquiry, CAG reference, recovery proceedings. Restoration: re-survey all eligible households, ensure immediate disbursal of pending legitimate wages, make MGNREGA actually functional in this panchayat through proper implementation. Involve the Gram Sabha as a monitoring partner going forward — MGNREGA's social audit mechanism is specifically designed to prevent this recurrence. I would also review all other panchayats in the district for similar patterns — fraud of this scale rarely exists in isolation.
Reform: Real-time MGNREGA payment tracking through DBT (direct bank transfer to Aadhaar-linked accounts) eliminates the cash-handling vulnerability. Social audits must be conducted on schedule with results publicly displayed — the MGNREGA Act mandates this but compliance is inconsistent. A district-level whistleblower mechanism for MGNREGA workers to report non-payment would create a ground-level check that no administrative review can replicate.
Discuss the following with reference to this case:
(a) Ethical issues involved in re-appropriation of funds from a welfare project to the developmental projects.
(b) Given the need for proper utilisation of public funds, discuss the options available to Rajesh Kumar. Is resigning a worthy option? (250 words, 20 marks)
T2: Parliamentary transparency (mandatory notification) vs. political timing (four states going to polls — notification creates embarrassment).
T3: Is this illegal or merely politically inconvenient? The distinction determines Rajesh's response.
Ethical issues: Three tensions are central. The welfare obligation of the state — NHS benefits economically weaker sections and represents a specific parliamentary allocation for that purpose — conflicts with development imperatives — the SEZ and gas plant are also legitimate public goods. A second tension is transparency vs. political embarrassment: the re-appropriation is legally permissible under GFR rules (with Finance Ministry approval) but politically sensitive because NHS has been publicly announced. A third tension is Rajesh's personal position: he is being asked to process a decision that his professional judgement may find ethically questionable, but that is not necessarily illegal.
The ethical distinction that matters most: Re-appropriation is a standard budgetary instrument — it is not inherently corrupt. The ethical question is: is the NHS being defunded for legitimate developmental reasons, or is it being defunded because weaker sections lack political voice? The answer shapes the response. If the decision is made through proper channels (Finance Ministry, Parliamentary notification), it is procedurally legitimate. If it is being pushed without transparency — suppressing the parliamentary notification to avoid questions — it is ethically wrong regardless of GFR compliance.
Options for Rajesh: Process the re-appropriation through full GFR procedure, including mandatory parliamentary intimation — refuse to process it without this. If the directive is to suppress the parliamentary communication, refuse that specific step and escalate in writing to the Finance Secretary. Rajesh's duty is to ensure the procedure is followed completely, not to resist the policy decision itself — that is a democratic question, not a bureaucratic one.
Is resignation appropriate? Resignation is a legitimate ethical choice only when the officer is being asked to do something that is illegal or deeply violates their conscience — and no institutional channel remains. Here, Rajesh has institutional options: process with full procedure, refuse improper suppression, escalate. Resignation is not appropriate as a first response to a politically uncomfortable but legally permissible re-appropriation. It would be premature and would not actually protect the NHS beneficiaries. If Rajesh is ultimately ordered to process it without parliamentary notification, and that order is put in writing, then refusal and potential escalation to the CAG is the appropriate next step — not resignation.
Reform: All re-appropriations above a defined threshold — especially from welfare schemes — should require a mandatory Welfare Impact Assessment before processing, tabled in Parliament with the re-appropriation notification. This prevents the weaker sections' funding from being treated as a residual budget that can be raided whenever development priorities require.