Last year, Dhiman Chakma was making headlines for all the wrong reasons.
The young IAS officer, who was serving as Sub-Collector of Dharamgarh in Odisha’s Kalahandi district, was arrested by the Odisha Vigilance Department in June 2025. Officials alleged that he was caught accepting a bribe of ₹10 lakh from a businessman. Investigators said the money was part of a larger demand of ₹20 lakh.
The case became even bigger after vigilance officials reportedly recovered around ₹47 lakh in cash during searches linked to the investigation. For many people, it was shocking. Not because corruption allegations against public officials are unheard of in India. Unfortunately, such stories appear every year. What made this case stand out was who the officer was. Dhiman Chakma belonged to a new generation of civil servants. He had cleared the UPSC examination and earned a place in one of the country’s most respected services. Like many successful candidates, his story was often shared as an example of hard work and determination.
The Odisha government has reinstated him
Nearly a year later, another headline has put his name back in the news. The Odisha government has reinstated him and posted him as Deputy Secretary in the Revenue and Disaster Management Department.
Legally, the government may be within its rights to do so. The officer has received bail, and the case is still pending before the courts. No court has declared him guilty. That fact matters and should not be ignored. But public reaction shows that legal correctness and public confidence are not always the same thing.
For most citizens, government institutions run on trust. A farmer applying for compensation, a student waiting for a scholarship, a business owner seeking approvals, or a family depending on a welfare scheme all of them trust that decisions are being taken fairly. They may never meet senior bureaucrats personally, but they still believe that people in those positions are expected to meet a higher standard. That is why stories involving corruption hit differently.
People are not just looking at the details of a case. They are asking themselves a simple question: can those entrusted with public power be trusted themselves?
The answer may eventually come from the courts. But public opinion does not wait for verdicts. It reacts to what it sees. And what many people see is this: an officer was arrested in a high-profile bribery case, a large amount of cash was reportedly recovered, the investigation is still not over, and yet the officer has returned to a significant government role.
Whether that perception is fair or unfair is almost beside the point. Perception itself matters.
Trust, once damaged, is difficult to rebuild. India often speaks about becoming a developed nation. We discuss economic growth, infrastructure projects, artificial intelligence, digital services and global influence. These are important goals. But development is not only about building roads, airports and smart cities.
Development also depends on the strength of institutions. A country grows when citizens believe that public offices are being used for public service. Investors bring money when they trust the system. Businesses expand when they believe rules will be applied fairly. Young people work hard for competitive exams because they believe merit will be rewarded.
Corruption weakens all of that.
It creates doubt where confidence should exist. One corruption case may not change a nation. But when such stories keep repeating, year after year, they slowly shape how people view the system itself. Cynicism becomes normal. Expectations fall. People stop being surprised.
That may be the most dangerous consequence of all. The debate around Dhiman Chakma’s reinstatement is therefore bigger than one officer or one government order. It reflects a wider concern about accountability in public life.
The courts will decide the legal outcome of the case. They should be allowed to do so without interference.
But citizens are equally justified in asking difficult questions about the standards expected from those who hold public office.
Because if India wants to become a developed country, integrity cannot be treated as an optional quality in governance. It has to be the foundation. Without public trust, even the best policies on paper will struggle to deliver the future the country hopes to build.


