THE LIGHT OF ANDAMANS | VOL 36 | ISSUE 03 | 01 NOV 2012
COVER
STORY
DSS: System-Driven Corruption
By
Zubair Ahmed
Is it a coincidence that Directors who come
on deputation from Navy carry the virus of corruption or is it a systemic
plague that inflicts the department? Three directors in succession have faced
corruption charges and had to be abruptly repatriated.
In fact, experts in the field opine that
those on deputation from Navy are neither acquainted with the commercial
aspects nor the mandatory documentation part. Without merchant shipping
background, they are prone to falter at every administrative decision they take.
Those on the helm of affairs need to know
the nitty-gritty of repair and maintenance of vessels, commercial aspects and
meeting the statutory requirements regarding safety of life at sea. Those with
Naval background need not worry about any surveys or MMD or DG Shipping
requirements.
Without professional experience, they are
prone to all kind of manipulations by those who know how the system can be bent
for their advantage and keep themselves safe. This is what has happened in the
department since long time. Although, Capt Seshasai has become an easy whipping
boy, the whole blame cannot be offloaded on to him as corruption is system
driven with more people involved.
The Deputy Director's role or those in the
planning remain hidden in the whole episode, whereas they play a major role in
all decision making process. Nevertheless, their imprint will remain
undetectable in the files.
On the one hand, DSS, the second largest
fleet after Shipping Corporation of India does not possess the Document
of Compliance to operate vessels. Hence, they rely on SCI or ABS by offloading
manning and technical management.
"Since 1989, the Department does not
have a Marine Engineer and the present crop of AMEs lack professional competency," said
a retired master. Just wishing for a Marine Engineer is not going to solve the
issue, as concrete steps towards making the whole Directorate compliant for
running its own vessels without offloading needs serious attention.
Its easy to blame SCI for fleecing the
Directorate, and to bring ABS into the picture, where Capt Seshasai played a
major role. ABS is equally incompetent without professionals and failing on the
maintenance part. First they entered into manning and later technical
management was also given to them.
ABS has very low base strength without
competence and about 70% of vessels are non-operational. SCI, owned by the
government follows certain procedures like they have an assessment system for
workshops and also maintain annual tariff. SCI inspects the workshop and make sure
about their financial and technical capability. Whereas, ABS has continuously
failed on this aspect. Still, it ABS was always favoured by the Director.
SCI has been maligned so much by the coterie
who controls the Director as well as the Secretariat; today it is looked down
by everyone. The crux of the issue is that no kickbacks can be secured from a
government agency.
Although SCI doesn't have a single workshop,
it maintains a huge fleet. They keep a set of approved and registered suppliers
and workshops on annual contract, whereas ABS goes for instant quotation, as
and when the problem arises. It however does not exnorate SCI from all blames.
The case of MV Nancowry which had gone to drydock at Colombo in 2010 is not running continuously
since a year. After every month of sailing,
the Surveyor puts it on hold and only gives extension for three months
and the ship idles in Chennai.
It's a curse that the Shipping sector in an Island territory remains an issue unsolved since decades.
Without a comprehensive overhaul of the system, many more Seshasais and cronies
are going to con the Islanders, and the ultimate casualty is the connectivity.
No comments:
Post a Comment