Special: In opening a can of worms, is the Prime Minister sending out a message? May be

Shunglu's career track record as a member of the Indian Administrative Service and, in particular, his tenure as CAG are impressive. Equally relevant to this investigation is how Shunglu spent his post-retirement life.

The decision itself was clearly taken before. If the swiftness, clarity and resoluteness of the Shunglu appointment point to a new mood of Prime Minister Singh, it bodes well for governance in New Delhi. More on that later.

Will the enquiry be merely into irregularities in the "conduct of the Games", the responsibility of the Organising Committee (OC), or also into the "creation of facilities", which would bring into its ambit at least three ministries of the Union government -- urban development, sports and information and broadcasting -- and the government of the National Capital Territory of Delhi?
Depending on how the terms of reference are drawn up, we would know who the lightning rods would be. Clearly, Suresh Kalmadi, the OC chairman, was not the only person at the top of the mess. A report prepared by the Union Ministry for Youth Affairs and Sports (MYAS) very helpfully tells us that Kalmadi only heads the OC which was responsible for "the conduct of the Games".

Then, we are very helpfully informed by the MYAS booklet: "Subsequently, on 19th June, 2009, a new GoM has been formed, under the chairmanship of Minister of Urban Development, to review the projects and take decisions as required to facilitate smooth implementation of all activities connected with the Commonwealth Games."
Everyone you can think of was a member of this GoM which, we are told, "discusses, inquires, urges and pushes the OC and various authorities, for timely and efficient completion of their duties".

The MYAS spent another Rs 2,904.86 crore, on "preparation of 14 stadiums and other venues". Then comes the whopper -- Rs 16,560 crore spent by the government of Delhi, "preparing Delhi" for the Games.
So, what aspects of the organisation of CWG 2010 will Mr Shunglu look at to see if there have been "irregularities"?
Clearly, the Shunglu enquiry can become the biggest anti-corruption investigation in post-Independence history. For the investigation to proceed without hindrance, the heads of all institutions being enquired into should step down till their names are cleared.
But it is not "corruption" alone that marred the Games. There was the incredible "inefficiency and delay" which, in fact, may have contributed more to the steep escalation in costs than corruption. Who is to blame for that? Apart from the monsoons of 2010, there is the irrepressible Mani Shankar Aiyar.

Then there are the many officials, from the high and mighty of babudom down, who were made responsible from time to time to get things done in time and properly, and failed in doing so.
Prime Minister Singh has taken a bold decision to open this can of worms, a veritable Pandora's box. In doing so, he has for the first time in his second tenure in office publicly asserted himself, saying "enough is enough".
Many will hope this is the beginning of a new phase in his tenure, when he lets his office, the government, his council of ministers, his party and coalition and the country know that he means business, that the buck stops with him, that his colleagues and officers must shape up or ship out.
Is this Dr Singh's message? "Stop playing games, clean up the mess and get to work!"
Many desperately hope so and, if it is, it's a message the nation would welcome.
Source: Business Standard