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Supreme Court seeks response from Centre on plea challenging third extension to ED Director Sanjay Kumar Mishra

The Supreme Court has asked the Central government to respond on a plea challenging the third extension which was granted to the incumbent director of Enforcement Directorate (ED), Sanjay Kumar Mishra.

The notice on the same was issued by the bench of Justice BR Gavai and Justice Vikram Nath to the Union government . The bench has posted the matter for hearing after six weeks.

Congress leader Jaya Thakur, filed the plea through advocate Varinder Kumar Sharma , which was drawn by advocates Varun Thakur and Shashank Ratnoo.

The plea stated that extension granted for the third time to the the director EDwas in violation of the top court’s orders and speels destruction to the democratic process of our country.

The top court is already seized of a batch of pleas challenging the validity of the earlier extensions given to Mishra.

The   Supreme Court in the year 2021 verdict had ruled against granting more extensions to Mishra.

The top court is already seized of a batch of pleas challenging the validity of the earlier extensions given to Mishra.

The top court has a batch of pleas which challenge, the validity of the extension given to Mishra.

The petitioners have said that the extension of Mishra’s tenure was in violation of Supreme Court verdict dated September 2021 which ruled against more extensions to Mishra.

The Supreme Court had affirmed an earlier judgement of the Central government dated November 13, 2020, which made retrospective revisions to Mishra’s appointment order, increasing his term from two to three years.

Mishra was first appointed as the ED Director for a two-year term in November 2018. The two-year term expired in November 2020. In May 2020, he had reached the retirement age of 60.

The Central Government however, issued an office order on November 13, 2020, stating that the President had modified the 2018 order to the effect that a time of ‘two years’ was changed to a period of ‘three years.’

This was challenged at the Supreme Court by the NGO Common Cause.

The Central government brought in an ordinance amending the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) Act, empowering itself to extend the tenure of the ED Director up to five years after the Supreme Court’s decision last year which was later challenged before the top court.

Senior Advocate KV Viswanathan was made the Amicus Curiae in the case by the Apex Court.

In the affidavit filed by the Central government said that the present batch of pleas are politically motivated since the petitioners belong to political parties whose leaders are currently under the ED scanner.

The petitioners Jaya Thakur, Saket Gokhale, Randeep Singh Surjewala and Mahua Moitra belong to either the Congress party or the Trinamool Congress whose top leaders are being probed by the ED.

The Union government defended the extension, by saying that work in these agencies require special talent and needs in a continuous process, and the person leading the organisation should have a tenure of two to five years.

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