N. Santosh Hegde | |
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Nitte Santosh Hegde |
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Born | 16 June 1940 Nitte, Udupi district, Karnataka |
Nationality | Indian |
Alma mater | St. Aloysius College, Mangalore, Madras Christian College, St. Joseph's College, Bangalore, Central College of Bangalore, University Law College |
Occupation | Jurist |
Nitte Santosh Hegde (born June 16, 1940) (Tulu: ಸಂತೋಷ ಹೆಗಡೆ) is a former justice of the Supreme Court Of India, former Solicitor General of India and was Lokayukta (ombudsman) for Karnataka State of India from 2006-2011.[1]
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Santosh Hegde was born in an ethnic Bunt[2] family to former speaker of Loksabha, Justice K. S. Hegde and his wife Meenakshi Hegde (née Adyanthaya). He is one of six children born to the couple.[3] He was born on 16 June 1940 in Nitte, Udupi district, Karnataka. He had his early education at St. Aloysius College, Mangalore and Madras Christian College in Madras. He completed his intermediate exam from St. Joseph's College, Bangalore and BSc degree from Central College of Bangalore. Hegde graduated with a law degree from Government Law College (now known as University Law College), Bangalore in 1965.[4]
After completing apprenticeship training, he enrolled as an advocate in January 1966 and was designated as senior advocate in May 1984. Hegde was appointed as the Advocate General for the state of Karnataka in February 1984 and held that position till August 1988. He worked as additional Solicitor General of the union of India from December 1989 to November 1990 and was re-appointed as the Solicitor General of India on 25-04-1998. Nitte Santosh Hegde was appointed as a judge of Supreme Court of India on 08-01-1999. He retired as judge of Supreme Court Of India in June 2005. He was conferred honorary doctorate of law degree by Mangalore University in 2005[5] For a brief period he worked as Chairperson of Telecom Dispute Settlement Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi. Hegde was of the view that Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) was not the authority for dispute resolution between customers and telecommunication service providers.[6] He was appointed as Lokayukta of Karnataka state on 3 August 2006 for a term of five years.
The Lok Ayukta had exposed major irregularities in mines in Bellary, including those owned by Obulapuram Mining Company and by G. Karunakara Reddy, G. Janardhana Reddy and G. Somashekara Reddy who are ministers in the Government of Karnataka.[7] He has expressed concern about illegal mining taking place in state of Karnataka which have deep repercussion for ecology and to exchequer of state.[8] A report constituted by the Lok Ayukta uncovered major violations and systemic corruption in iron-ore mining in Bellary. There were violations in the allowed geography, encroachment of forest land, massive underpayment of state mining royalties relative to the market price of iron ore and systematic starvation of government mining entities. The damage to public interest was so serious that he recommended banning all exports of iron ore and limiting iron ore production for captive production of iron and steel[9][10]
Hegde resigned from the Lokayukta position on 23 June 2010 after an honest officer (Deputy Conservator of Forests R Gokul) was suspended by order of minister J. Krishna Palemar and he felt powerless to help.[14] He expressed inability to be effective in his anti-corruption mandate owing to a non-cooperative Government of Karnataka.[15] After the resignation, he stated:
Amid media speculation[16] that the ports minister Palemar had recommended Gokul's suspension on behalf of some politicians with business interests, Palemar defended his recommendation to suspend Gokul since he failed to attend a meeting, for it raised suspicions that he may be involved in the scam himself.[16] In fact, in a press meeting, Hegde indicated that:
The matter, which is being called the Belekeri port scam, relates to 3.5 million tons of illegal iron ore, belonging to the powerful mining lobby headed by G. Janardhana Reddy, that was ready to be exported from Belekeri port. After Gokul seized the ore and the high court refused to permit it's export without appropriate papers, a large part of it was surreptitiously exported from the port.[18] Hegde's resignation sought to underline the helplessness of the advisory post of the Lokayukta in such situations.[19]
After persistent protests and public pressure [20] Karnataka Chief Minister Yeddyurappa admitted to an illegal iron-ore export racket at Belekeri Port involving 35 lakh metric tonnes of iron ore.[21]
Justice Hegde withdrew his resignation and agreed to continue in the post of Lok Ayukta after persuasion from National leadership of the BJP. The party risked a major loss of face in the BJP ruled Karnataka State government by allowing an upright person in public service to leave office,[22] though All India Congress Committee general secretary B K Hariprasad said that "Hegde's actions prove that he is a BJP man".[23]
He retired as Lokayukta of Karnataka on 2 August 2011. His successor was Justice Shivraj Patil. But, barely two months after he was appointed Lokayukta of Karnataka, Justice Shivraj Patil on September 19 resigned after a controversy erupted over allotment of housing sites for him and his wife allegedly in violation of rules.
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