📋 The Scenario
Ms. X is a mid-level civil servant in the urban development department approving a contract for a community park. She receives confidential information that one shortlisted contractor has a history of poor workmanship and corruption allegations in other cities — nothing legally proven. Her HOD, Mr. Y, tells her not to disclose it (project delays, reputation). Ms. X believes withholding it compromises transparency and public trust.
⚠️ The Core Ethical Tension — Three Competing Obligations
Confidentiality — the information was received through official channels and is not yet verified ·
Transparency — public servants owe accountability to citizens ·
Due Process — an unproven allegation cannot be used to penalise without proper procedure
Three Proposed Actions
1Immediately disclose the information to the project committee and the public.
2Recommend removing the contractor from the shortlist to protect the project’s integrity.
3Propose a ‘limited disclosure’ to an oversight committee, while keeping the information confidential from the public for the time being.
A1 and 2 only
B3 only ✓
C2 and 3 only
D1, 2 and 3
✓
Correct Answer: (B) 3 only — Limited disclosure to oversight committee
Unverified + confidential = must go through institutional channel first · Public disclosure = premature · Removal without due process = natural justice violation
Each Statement — Why It Passes or Fails the Four Tests
1
✗ Wrong — Premature public disclosure
Immediately disclose to project committee AND the public
“Immediately” and “public” are both the problems here. The information is unverified and confidential. Publicly releasing unproven allegations:• Defamation risk — publishing false allegations exposes the department and Ms. X to legal liability
• Bypasses institutional process — oversight committees, vigilance authorities, and legal review mechanisms exist precisely for this situation
• Due process violation — the contractor has not been given a chance to respond to unverified claims
• Premature — if information is later found to be incorrect, public trust in the department suffers more, not less
Transparency in public administration does not mean releasing every piece of sensitive, unverified information directly to the public. It means working through proper institutional channels.
✗ Unverified + confidential ≠ immediate public disclosure
Defamation risk · Bypasses oversight mechanism · No due process for contractor · Transparency ≠ releasing unverified allegations publicly
2
✗ Wrong — Punitive action without due process
Recommend removing the contractor from the shortlist
This fails the natural justice test. The principle of audi alteram partem (hear the other side) is a fundamental requirement of administrative law in India. Recommending removal based solely on unverified, unproven allegations:• Violates natural justice — the contractor has not been heard and has not been given an opportunity to respond
• Legally challengeable — the contractor can challenge the removal in a tribunal or court; it would likely be overturned
• Prejudges an unproven case — “allegations of corruption… though nothing has been legally proven” — administrative action based on this alone is disproportionate
• Puts the cart before the horse — the oversight committee should first verify the information; if verified, removal follows. If not verified, removal would be unjust.
The oversight committee (Statement 3) is the correct first step; removal may follow as a consequence — but not before verification.
✗ Audi alteram partem violated — no due process
Removal on unproven allegations = legally challengeable + natural justice violation. Verification must precede punitive action.
3
✓ Correct — The only option that passes all four tests
Limited disclosure to oversight committee — confidential from public for now
This is the textbook correct institutional response. It threads the needle across all four competing obligations:✓ Confidentiality: Information is shared only with the oversight committee — a body legally empowered to receive and evaluate sensitive official information. It is not leaked or released publicly.
✓ Transparency: Ms. X does NOT suppress the information as Mr. Y advises. She ensures it reaches the appropriate authority. This is genuine institutional transparency — routing information to those who can act on it, not burying it.
✓ Due Process: The oversight committee can investigate, call the contractor, examine the evidence, and decide — with all parties having an opportunity to be heard. No punitive action precedes verification.
✓ Counters improper pressure: Mr. Y’s advice to suppress is itself potentially an ethics violation. By escalating to the oversight committee, Ms. X protects herself and the public interest without going rogue.
This is also consistent with whistleblower protection norms — internal escalation through proper channels before any external exposure.
✓ Passes all four tests simultaneously
Confidentiality ✓ · Transparency ✓ · Due Process ✓ · Counters Mr. Y’s pressure ✓ · The only option that satisfies every obligation
The Four Tests — How Each Statement Performs
| Test | Statement 1 (Public) | Statement 2 (Remove) | Statement 3 (Oversight) ✓ |
| Confidentiality | ✗ Violates — public release of confidential info | Partial — removes contractor but reveals info to committee only | ✓ Info stays within authorised body |
| Transparency | Superficially yes — but premature and defamatory | ✗ No transparency channel engaged | ✓ Proper institutional transparency — info reaches authority that can act |
| Due Process | ✗ No due process — public allegation before verification | ✗ Removal without hearing = audi alteram partem violation | ✓ Oversight committee investigates with full due process |
| Counters Mr. Y | Yes — but improperly | Partial — doesn’t engage proper authority | ✓ Escalates to proper authority — overrides suppression attempt |
Key Principle — How to Handle Unverified Confidential Information
🧠 The UPSC Framework for Confidential + Unverified Information
The graduated disclosure protocol: Suppress (Mr. Y’s advice — wrong) → Oversight committee (Statement 3 — correct) → Public disclosure if verified → Immediate public release (Statement 1 — premature). Information flows through institutions, not around them.
Why Statement 2 fails despite good intent: Recommending removal sounds protective of public interest — but punishment before proof is a hallmark of arbitrary administration. Even in procurement, a contractor is entitled to a fair process. Audi alteram partem = hear the other side before acting against them.
Transparency ≠ immediate public release: Institutional transparency means information flows to the right authority at the right time. An oversight committee receiving confidential information IS transparency — it is how accountable governance works. Releasing unverified allegations to the public before investigation is not transparency; it is recklessness.
The oversight committee as the ethical pivot: It simultaneously (a) prevents suppression, (b) enables verification, (c) ensures due process, and (d) gives Ms. X institutional protection against Mr. Y’s pressure. It is the correct first step — from which removal or public disclosure may follow if the information is verified.


