Ashok Lavasa

Ashok Lavasa (IAST: Aśoka Lavāsā) (born 21 October 1957) is a retired 1980 batch Indian Administrative Service officer of Haryana cadre and was one of the two Election Commissioners of India. He has also served as the Finance Secretary of India, Environment, Forests and Climate Change Secretary of India and Civil Aviation Secretary of India. He served as the Vice President of Asian Development Bank (ADB) from August 2020 to August 2023.[2]

Ashok Lavasa
Lavasa in August 2016
Election Commissioner of India
In office
23 January 2018 – 18 August 2020
Appointed byPresident of India then, Ram Nath Kovind
Vice PresidentVenkaiah Naidu
Preceded byG. V. G. Krishnamurty
Succeeded byRajiv Kumar[1]
Finance Secretary of India (in charge of Department of Expenditure)
In office
30 April 2016 – 30 October 2017
Appointed byAppointments Committee of the Cabinet
Preceded byRatan P. Watal
Succeeded byAjay Narayan Jha
Environment, Forests and Climate Change Secretary of India
In office
29 August 2014 – 30 April 2016
Appointed byAppointments Committee of the Cabinet
Preceded byV. Rajagopalan
Succeeded byAjay Narayan Jha
Civil Aviation Secretary of India
In office
1 January 2014 – 29 August 2014
Appointed byAppointments Committee of the Cabinet
Preceded byK. N. Srivastava
Succeeded byV. Somasundaran
Personal details
Born (1957-10-21) 21 October 1957 (age 66)
Rajasthan, India
Nationality Indian
Alma materRASHTRIYA MILITARY SCHOOL BELGAUM ; Deshbandhu College Delhi University
Southern Cross University, New South Wales
OccupationRetired IAS officer

Education

Ashok Lavasa did his schooling from Belgaum Military School. Ashok Lavasa is a graduate (BA Honours) from Deshbandhu college and a postgraduate (MA) in English from University of Delhi,[3][4][5] he has an MBA degree from Southern Cross University in New South Wales, Australia.[3][5] In addition, has an MPhil in defence and strategic studies.[4]

Career

Before IAS

Before being appointed as an IAS officer, Lavasa taught literature in the Delhi University.[4][5] He also had a stint with the State Bank of India as a probationary officer.[4][5]

As an IAS officer

Lavasa calling on the Vice President of India, Venkaiah Naidu in February 2018

Lavasa has served in key positions for both the Government of India and the Government of Haryana, like as Principal Secretary and Financial Commissioner (Renewable Energy Sources), Principal Secretary and Financial Commissioner (Power), Chief Coordinator (Industries), resident commissioner of Haryana, managing director of Haryana State Federation of Co-operative Sugar Mills (HSFCOSML), director of Haryana State Industrial Development Corporation (HSIDC), managing director of Haryana Tourism Corporation (HTC), and as the deputy commissioner and district magistrate of Jind and Gurgaon districts in the Haryana government,[3][4][5] and as the Union Finance Secretary, Union Environment, Forests and Climate Change Secretary, Union Civil Aviation Secretary, special secretary in the Ministry of Power, joint secretary in the Ministry of Home Affairs, and as a joint secretary in the Department of Economic Affairs of the Ministry of Finance in the Indian government.[3][4][5]

Civil Aviation Secretary

Lavasa was appointed as the Union Civil Aviation Secretary by the Appointments Committee of the Cabinet (ACC) in December 2013,[6][7][8][9] he assumed office on 1 January 2014,[3] and demitted it on 29 August 2014,[3] when he was appointed as the Union Environment, Forests and Climate Change Secretary.

Environment, Forests and Climate Change Secretary

Lavasa was appointed as the Union Environment, Forests and Climate Change Secretary by the Appointments Committee of the Cabinet (ACC) in August 2014,[10] he assumed office on 29 August 2014,[3] and demitted it on 30 April 2016,[3] when he was appointed as the Union Expenditure Secretary.

Expenditure Secretary

Lavasa was appointed as the Union Expenditure Secretary by the Appointments Committee of the Cabinet (ACC) in April 2016,[11][12][13] he assumed office on 30 April 2016,[3] and demitted it and simultaneously superannuated from service on 30 October 2017.[3]

As the seniormost secretary in the Ministry of Finance after the retirement of Ratan Watal, Lavasa was designated as Finance Secretary in May 2016.[14][15][16]

Post-retirement

Lavasa taking charge as one of the two Election Commissioners of India in February 2018

Election Commissioner of India

Post-retirement, Lavasa was appointed as one of the two Election Commissioners of India in January 2018.[17][18][19][20][21] Lavasa assumed charge as Election Commissioner on 23 January 2018.[22][23][24]

Mr Lavasa made headlines in 2019 after a dissenting opinion on a panel's ruling of complaints against Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Amit Shah during the Lok Sabha election campaign.

Six complaints were filed against PM Modi. Lavasa disagreed with his panel colleagues in some of these cases.

He soon stopped attending meetings, saying "minority decisions" were being "suppressed in a manner contrary to well-established conventions observed by multi-member statutory bodies".

In December 2019, Mr Lavasa in an article in The Indian Express wrote: "The honest, however, go on regardless, perhaps driven by an inner force that borders on recklessness. A society that creates hurdles which exhaust the honest or wound them paves the path for its own perdition".

This was two months after an income tax notice was sent to his wife, Novel S Lavasa, over alleged discrepancies in filings. Sources had said the information had been sought "related to foreign exchange". Mrs Lavasa said she had "paid all taxes due" and "disclosed all income" and that she was cooperating.[25][26]

He served as Vice president of Asian Development Bank (ADB) from 31 August 2020 till 31 August 2023. [27]

Work

  • Lavasa, Ashok; Sethi, Ravi Mohan (2010). An Uncivil Servant: The Success Story of a Bureaucrat Turned Businessman. New Delhi: Rupa Publications. ISBN 978-81-291-1704-5.
  • Lavasa, Ashok (2021): An Ordinary Life: Portrait of an Indian Generation. Harper India ISBN 978-93-5422-317-4

References