The rise of Nuzhat Gul from a daily-wage employee, reportedly engaged on a monthly salary of ₹6,000, to the high-ranking post of Secretary, J&K Sports Council, has become the subject of widespread public debate. Yet, the controversy is not merely about one individual. Over the past several decades, Jammu and Kashmir has witnessed repeated allegations of individuals rising to influential public positions or securing appointments outside the framework of transparent and merit-based recruitment. The contentious issue of backdoor appointments has persisted for decades, irrespective of which political party has been in power in Jammu and Kashmir.
Former IAS officer Ms. Sonali Kumar, in her book “Unmasking Kashmir: A Bureaucrat Reveals”, describes how individuals allegedly rose through the administrative hierarchy owing to political patronage rather than transparent institutional processes. She characterises these as systemic distortions in governance.
Against this backdrop, the controversy surrounding appointment of Nuzhat Gul assumes significance not merely because of one individual but because it has revived a larger debate about transparency, accountability and institutional credibility. Whenever a person rises from a low-paid contractual or daily-wage engagement to one of the most influential positions in a public institution, every stage of that journey must be capable of withstanding the highest degree of public, administrative and legal scrutiny.
Public office is a public trust, not a private privilege. Every appointment, promotion and elevation financed by taxpayers’ money must be transparent, merit-based and demonstrably compliant with the law. If the process was impeccable, there should be no hesitation in placing the complete service record, recruitment process, eligibility criteria, promotion orders and statutory approvals in the public domain. Transparency is the strongest antidote to speculation.
The larger issue is institutional. Every appointment perceived to be opaque erodes public confidence and demoralises thousands of deserving candidates who spend years preparing for competitive examinations. Governance cannot afford even the perception that influence outweighs merit. The issue, therefore, is not about personalities but about accountability. Public institutions earn legitimacy not by expecting unquestioning acceptance of their decisions, but by ensuring those decisions can withstand rigorous legal and public scrutiny.
