Bengal's Bureaucratic Shuffle: 17 IAS Officers Transferred Amid Election Prep

The West Bengal government has executed a massive bureaucratic reshuffle just ahead of election season. Seventeen IAS officers have been transferred, including ten District Magistrates who also serve as election officers. This unprecedented move comes hours before the Election Commission was set to announce revision dates for poll-bound states. The timing raises questions about potential technical complications once the election process formally begins.

Key Points: West Bengal Transfers 17 IAS Officers Before Election Revision

  • 10 District Magistrates transferred across key districts including North and South 24 Parganas
  • Kolkata Municipal Corporation Commissioner also replaced in major shakeup
  • Reshuffle announced hours before Election Commission's press conference
  • Transfers could face technical hurdles once election revision exercise begins
2 min read

Major bureaucratic reshuffle in Bengal ahead of SIR, 17 IAS officers transferred

Major bureaucratic reshuffle in Bengal transfers 17 IAS officers including 10 District Magistrates ahead of Special Intensive Revision by Election Commission.

"The transfer of 17 IAS officers, especially 10 DMs at one go, was unheard of at least in the recent past - Senior Bureaucrat"

Kolkata, Oct 27

Ahead of the forthcoming Special Intensive Revision (SIR) proposed by the Election Commission of India (ECI), the West Bengal government, on Monday, announced a major bureaucratic reshuffle in the state by transferring as many as 17 Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officers at one go.

The 17 bureaucrats whose transfers have been announced include 10 District Magistrates. The districts that will have new DMs, who will also act as District Election Officers, are North 24 Parganas, South 24 Parganas, Cooch Behar, Murshidabad, Purulia, Darjeeling, Malda, Birbhum, Jhargram, and East Midnapore.

The Commissioner of the Kolkata Municipal Corporation has also been changed. The transfer of 17 IAS officers, especially 10 DMs at one go, was unheard of at least in the recent past, said a senior bureaucrat of the state government.

Incidentally, the massive bureaucratic reshuffle was announced by the state Personnel and Administrative Reforms Department in the afternoon, just a couple of hours before the press conference by the Chief Election Commissioner at New Delhi, where the dates for SIR for 2026 four poll-bound states, including West Bengal, and one poll-bound union territory, are expected to be announced.

Bureaucratic circles feel that once the SIR dates are announced, there could be some technical difficulties for the transfer of the bureaucrats, especially the DMs, since the latter also act as the District Election Officers.

The ECI has already made it clear that once the revision exercise starts, the state government will not be able to transfer electoral officers.

Officially, the state government is, however, describing the transfer as routine.

The new DMs are expected to run the administrative show in the respective districts during the Assembly elections in West Bengal scheduled next year, unless the ECI decides to transfer some of them before the elections.

As per the rule, once the election dates are announced, the state administration comes under the authority of the ECI, which can decide to transfer any state government officer or staff till the time the model code of conduct is in force.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
🫨 17 IAS officers at once! That's massive. Hope the new officers can handle the election pressure. West Bengal elections are always high-stakes affairs.
A
Arjun K
As someone from North 24 Parganas, I hope the new DM understands local issues better. Last election had so many complaints about voter list errors.
S
Sarah B
While I understand the need for administrative changes, doing this right before election announcements seems like political maneuvering. The EC should monitor this closely.
V
Vikram M
Actually, this might be good for administration. Fresh officers can bring new energy. Let's give them a chance to prove themselves! 👍
K
Kavya N
The timing is everything here. Calling it "routine" when it's clearly strategic. Hope the Election Commission ensures free and fair elections despite these last-minute changes.

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