New Delhi, Dec 1 (JKNS): The Delhi High Court on Monday heard the defamation suit filed by former Jammu & Kashmir Chief Secretary Arun Kumar Mehta against retired IAS officer Ashok Kumar Ranchhodbhai Parmar and select news media platforms, in a case that has rapidly evolved into a textbook instance of how unverified allegations can be weaponised against governance reforms.
The matter appeared as Item 45 before Justice Purushindra Kumar Kaurav in Court No. 47, listed as CS(OS) 859/2025 with accompanying interlocutory applications. The matter was heard at length today.
Adv. Vasudev Sharan Swain filed the matter in Delhi High Court on behalf of Dr Mehta. Further, Sr. Advocate Puneet Mittal, Sh. Nar Hari Singh (Advocate-on-Record) and Sr. Advocate Nachiketa Joshi appeared and advanced arguments today on behalf of Dr Mehta. The court directed the defendants to file their response within days.
The matter has been listed for hearing next on. Dr Mehta’s suit against Mr Parmar and Ors has sought a permanent mandatory injunction and damages of Rs 2.55 Cr.
Parmar had circulated letters claiming he had lodged corruption complaints against Mehta before the CBI and the National Commission for Scheduled Castes (NCSC).
However, these claims have crumbled under official scrutiny. The CBI and NCSC, in their formal replies to RTI applications, categorically denied receiving any such complaint from Parmar.
Many of these alleged complaints were written as Chairman, Bureau of Public Enterprises. However, no such letters existed in its records, as per an RTI reply, raising serious concerns about the authenticity of the communications Parmar had been widely circulating.
The credibility of his accusations suffered a further blow when the Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB), after examining his allegations relating to governance in J&K, concluded that none of his claims could be sustained.
The ACB found no irregularity in the digital governance systems introduced during Mehta’s tenure—systems such as BEAMS, PaySys, online sanctions, and e-tendering, which had cut discretionary power and made every expenditure traceable.
Mehta’s defamation suit argues that Parmar’s allegations whose quantum astonishingly fluctuated between ₹1,000 and ₹14,000 crore were not just factually baseless but malicious, designed to tarnish the reputation of an officer who brought unprecedented transparency to public finance administration in J&K. The petition frames this as part of a broader pattern: a backlash by those unsettled by the elimination of opaque, discretionary and manual systems and the rise of digital accountability.
The suit further points out that as Chief Secretary, Mehta had no role in contractual matters, which were in the domain of Contract Committees, besides numerous other contradictions, such as allegations in one case when Mehta was not even posted in J&K.
Legal observers say the case has implications beyond the individuals involved. With central agencies denying receipt of complaints, with BPE confirming no record of Parmar’s letters, and with the ACB dismissing his allegations, the suit raises a larger institutional question: Should public servants be allowed to circulate false complaints and unverified charges without consequence, especially when such actions can derail reform and damage reputations?
The Court is expected to take up further submissions in the coming hearings. (JKNS)
