Over 100 Retd. Bureaucrats Dismayed at India’s ‘Weak, Ambivalent’ Response to Israeli Genocide in Gaza

New Delhi: The Constitutional Conduct Group, a collective of former civil servants of the Central and state governments, including former diplomats, has written an open letter to the Prime Minister, Home Minister and External Affairs Minister, expressing their outrage over the genocidal situation in Gaza perpetrated by Israeli forces as well as concern over “India’s weak and ambivalent response.”
“India’s reluctance to speak out against the merciless collective punishment of Palestinians in Gaza, has been deeply disconcerting. India has also not condemned the rapid expansion of illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank in recent months, a process that continues to fuel violence against and forced displacement of Palestinians,” read the letter, endorsed by over 100 former civil servants.
The letter calls upon the India government to “reclaim its historic leadership in addressing colonial injustices and consider initiatives to pull Israel back from its genocidal course that may result in one of the blackest chapters in the history of humanity. “
Read the full letter below:
Letter protesting the inhuman action by Israel in Gaza
Honourable Prime Minister of India,
Honourable Home Minister of India,
Honourable External Affairs Minister of India,
The Constitutional Conduct Group, is a group of retired civil servants of the Central and All India Services who have worked both with the Central and State governments. As a group, we have no political affiliation and are only interested in safeguarding constitutional and universal human values. We are writing today to express our outrage over the genocidal situation in Gaza perpetrated by Israel, and concern over India’s weak and ambivalent response.
On October 7, 2023, against the backdrop of continuing Israeli occupation of Palestinian and Arab lands since 1948, and a deep division in Israel over Prime Minister Netanyahu, on corruption, judicial and security issues, Hamas launched an attack on the south of Israel killing 1195 Israelis and taking more than 200 hostage. Israel retaliated with a grossly disproportionate and ferocious attack unleashing violence and inhuman measures against Palestinians in Gaza on a scale unprecedented in recent history, in total violation of international laws of war and humanitarian standards.
Israel also expanded its military and intelligence operations to cover the Hezbollah in Lebanon, air defence and nuclear targets in Iran and air strikes in Syria that have killed hundreds; and ground incursions into the occupied Syrian Golan Heights, raising alarms about Israel covertly pursuing its ambitions of Greater Israel.
The human toll of this remorseless retaliation has been horrific. In Gaza alone, nearly 62,000 Palestinians have been killed, but so have hundreds of foreign aid workers, UN personnel and media professionals, with the numbers mounting every day. Entire urban areas and almost 70 per cent of all buildings have been flattened to rubble. These constitute grave war crimes.
To this has been now added a daily toll of at least 5-10 Palestinians, particularly children, dying of starvation induced by the denial and control of food, medicines, fuel and other humanitarian aid; and scores being killed in Israeli firing as Gazans clamour for what little aid is allowed to trickle in, in what appears to be a deliberate attempt to starve the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians and force their mass expulsion from the ‘open-air prison’ in Gaza into empty desert wildernesses further south.
There have been growing protests within Israel by hostage families and the public (such as hundreds of thousands in a huge rally in Tel Aviv on August 17) calling for an end to the war and return of the remaining 53 hostages; severe criticism from mainstream politicians for Netanyahu’s use of the war to perpetuate his rule on grounds of national security; and calls from within and outside Israel to act against Israel. South Africa took the lead in referring Israel’s excesses in Gaza to the International Court of Justice (ICJ). Saudi Arabia condemned, while over 100 international NGOs signed a letter urging the world to pressure Israel to stop "weaponizing aid" in Gaza and ease its restrictive registration process for groups seeking to distribute supplies in the Strip.
Tragically for the Palestinians, in the absence of support from the United States and those who champion the values of freedom, democracy and human rights, the world has been powerless to stop this savage collective punishment. Indeed, the extent of impunity that Israel has enjoyed would not have been possible without the support of most Western governments and the absence of effective action by Arab states.
Sharp condemnations, calls for cessation of armed attacks, and pleas for access of humanitarian aid into Gaza from the UN General Assembly, the International Court of Justice, the International Criminal Court, American universities and huge rallies in western capitals have been totally ignored by Israel’s leaders. But the slow starvation of an entire population in a man-made famine with searing images of emaciated, starving and malnourished children and adults, seems to have finally stirred the international conscience.
In a landmark decision in November 2024, the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and defence minister, Yoav Gallant. In May 2024, Ireland, Norway and Spain officially recognised the State of Palestine. Several Western governments including key US allies UK, Canada, France and Australia have retracted their blanket support for Israel, and have ‘threatened’ to recognise a Palestinian state at the coming UN General Assembly if Israel didn’t change its position.
Meanwhile, in an ominous turn, on August 8, a divided Israeli Cabinet took a controversial decision to evacuate and occupy Gaza city and central refugee camps in Gaza and take full control of the Gaza strip by October 7, 2025. Preparations for this have already begun. Last week, influential far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich announced long held settlement plans that would sever the north and south of the West Bank and split it in two in a move that he said would "bury the idea of a Palestinian state."
India’s response to this profound ethical, moral and existential challenge to humanity has sadly been not just disappointing but cynical, with the government issuing insincere expressions of support for the Palestinian cause on the one hand, while supporting, and sympathizing with, Israel on the other. It has gone along with UN resolutions in 2023 and 2024 urging an end to Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory, asserted India’s support for the two-state solution, and called for extension of humanitarian aid to Gaza, but refused to condemn Israel’s disproportionate response to the October 7 attacks, or its brutal carnage against Palestinians in Gaza, or demand an unconditional ceasefire.
India’s closet support for Israel was exposed in June 2025 when it abstained on a critical UNGA resolution that called for an “immediate, unconditional and permanent” ceasefire in Gaza, unimpeded humanitarian access to Gazans, release of all hostages held by Hamas and other armed groups, and condemned the use of starvation and the denial of humanitarian aid as a tactic of war. India, instead of voting in favour, urged direct diplomacy between both parties to end the conflict, as if both parties were equally at fault. India was only one of 18 other countries to abstain from the resolution. 149 countries voted in favour.
India’s reluctance to speak out against the merciless collective punishment of Palestinians in Gaza, has been deeply disconcerting. India has also not condemned the rapid expansion of illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank in recent months, a process that continues to fuel violence against and forced displacement of Palestinians.
The ambivalence, and general disregard in India for Palestinian suffering in the face of possible genocide, may well be part of a disturbing rightward communal shift in Indian public opinion, governance and judiciary. Police in various Indian states have routinely cracked down on small groups protesting against Israel’s war in Gaza. In July, a Hindutva mob, allegedly backed by the police, violently disrupted a Palestine solidarity event in New Delhi’s Nehru Place. Even more shocking was the dismissal by the Bombay High Court of a petition challenging the police’s refusal to give permission for a rally on Gaza. The High Court preached to the petitioners to “be patriots”, “concentrate on problems affecting India” and not concern itself with distant problems. Meanwhile, the government has expressed satisfaction in Parliament, that since it signed a bilateral framework agreement in November 2023, 20,000 Indians have got jobs in Israel that Palestinians lost because of the war.
This is a far cry from the internationalism of India’s freedom struggle, its firm opposition through the UN, NAM and other platforms to imperial machinations, colonialism and apartheid of which Israel was one outcome, and its principled position on the Palestinian cause since its inception. The current trends in government and broader society, reflect a communalization of our collective world view, in which national interest, foreign policy and security considerations are increasingly being seen through a narrow, communal prism.
The Constitutional Conduct Group adds its voice to the section of the international civil community that condemns the rabid Israeli response to the horrific Hamas terrorist attack of October 7, 2023, against the background of Israel’s continuing occupation of Palestinian lands, its deliberate war crimes, its ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians from Gaza, and a slow and defiant genocide that now mimics the holocaust of Jews in Europe in the 20th century and mocks the powerlessness of the international community. We call upon the government of India to reclaim its historic leadership in addressing colonial injustices and consider initiatives to pull Israel back from its genocidal course that may result in one of the blackest chapters in the history of humanity.
Satyameva Jayate
Constitutional Conduct Group (110 signatories, as below)
1 |
Anita Agnihotri |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Department of Social Justice Empowerment, GoI |
2 |
Talmiz Ahmad |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Oman and the UAE |
3 |
Anand Arni |
RAS (Retd.) |
Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI |
4 |
Sandeep Bagchee |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra |
5 |
J.L. Bajaj |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Chairman, Administrative Reforms and Decentralisation Commission, Govt. of Uttar Pradesh |
6 |
G. Balachandhran |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal |
7 |
Vappala Balachandran |
IPS (Retd.) |
Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI |
8 |
Gopalan Balagopal |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Special Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal |
9 |
Chandrashekar Balakrishnan |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Coal, GoI |
10 |
Sushant Baliga |
Engineering Services (Retd.) |
Former Additional Director General, Central PWD, GoI |
11 |
Rana Banerji |
RAS (Retd.) |
Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI |
12 |
Sharad Behar |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Madhya Pradesh |
13 |
Aurobindo Behera |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Odisha |
14 |
Madhu Bhaduri |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Portugal |
15 |
K.V. Bhagirath |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary General, Indian Ocean Rim Association, Mauritius |
16 |
Pradip Bhattacharya |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Additional Chief Secretary, Development & Planning and Administrative Training Institute, Govt. of West Bengal |
17 |
Nutan Guha Biswas |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Member, Police Complaints Authority, Govt. of NCT of Delhi |
18 |
Meeran C Borwankar |
IPS (Retd.) |
Former DGP, Bureau of Police Research and Development, GoI |
19 |
Ravi Budhiraja |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Chairman, Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust, GoI |
20 |
Maneshwar Singh Chahal |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Secretary, Home, Govt. of Punjab |
21 |
R. Chandramohan |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Secretary, Transport and Urban Development, Govt. of NCT of Delhi |
22 |
Rachel Chatterjee |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Special Chief Secretary, Agriculture, Govt. of Andhra Pradesh |
23 |
Kalyani Chaudhuri |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal |
24 |
Purnima Chauhan |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Administrative Reforms, Youth Services & Sports and Fisheries, Govt. of Himachal Pradesh |
25 |
Gurjit Singh Cheema |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Financial Commissioner (Revenue), Govt. of Punjab |
26 |
F.T.R. Colaso |
IPS (Retd.) |
Former Director General of Police, Govt. of Karnataka & former Director General of Police, Govt. of Jammu & Kashmir |
27 |
P.R. Dasgupta |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Chairman, Food Corporation of India, GoI |
28 |
Pradeep K. Deb |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Deptt. Of Sports, GoI |
29 |
Nitin Desai |
|
Former Chief Economic Adviser, Ministry of Finance, GoI |
30 |
M.G. Devasahayam |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Govt. of Haryana |
31 |
Kiran Dhingra |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Ministry of Textiles, GoI |
32 |
Sushil Dubey |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Sweden |
33 |
A.S. Dulat |
IPS (Retd.) |
Former OSD on Kashmir, Prime Minister’s Office, GoI |
34 |
K.P. Fabian |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Italy |
35 |
Prabhu Ghate |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Addl. Director General, Department of Tourism, GoI |
36 |
Suresh K. Goel |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Director General, Indian Council of Cultural Relations, GoI |
37 |
S.K. Guha |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Joint Secretary, Department of Women & Child Development, GoI |
38 |
H.S. Gujral |
IFoS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Chief Conservator of Forests, Govt. of Punjab |
39 |
Meena Gupta |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Ministry of Environment & Forests, GoI |
40 |
Ravi Vira Gupta |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India |
41 |
Sajjad Hassan |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Govt. of Manipur |
42 |
Rasheda Hussain |
IRS (Retd.) |
Former Director General, National Academy of Customs, Excise & Narcotics |
43 |
Siraj Hussain |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Department of Agriculture, GoI |
44 |
Najeeb Jung |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Lieutenant Governor, Delhi |
45 |
Sanjay Kaul |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Secretary, Govt. of Karnataka |
46 |
Gita Kripalani |
IRS (Retd.) |
Former Member, Settlement Commission, GoI |
47 |
Ish Kumar |
IPS (Retd.) |
Former DGP (Vigilance & Enforcement), Govt. of Telangana and former Special Rapporteur, National Human Rights Commission |
48 |
Sudhir Kumar |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Member, Central Administrative Tribunal |
49 |
Subodh Lal |
IPoS (Resigned) |
Former Deputy Director General, Ministry of Communications, GoI |
50 |
Sandip Madan |
IAS (Resigned) |
Former Secretary, Himachal Pradesh Public Service Commission |
51 |
Dinesh Malhotra |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Govt. of Himachal Pradesh |
52 |
P.M.S. Malik |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Myanmar & Special Secretary, MEA, GoI |
53 |
Harsh Mander |
IAS (Retd.) |
Govt. of Madhya Pradesh |
54 |
Amitabh Mathur |
IPS (Retd.) |
Former Special Secretary, Cabinet Secretariat, GoI |
55 |
Aditi Mehta |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Rajasthan |
56 |
Shivshankar Menon |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Foreign Secretary and Former National Security Adviser |
57 |
Malay Mishra |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Hungary |
58 |
Sunil Mitra |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Ministry of Finance, GoI |
59 |
Sudhansu Mohanty |
IDAS (Retd.) |
Former Financial Adviser (Defence Services), Ministry of Defence, GoI |
60 |
Jugal Mohapatra |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Department of Rural Development, GoI |
61 |
Ruchira Mukerjee |
IP&TAFS (Retd.) |
Former Advisor (Finance), Telecom Commission, GoI |
62 |
Anup Mukerji |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Bihar |
63 |
Deb Mukharji |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former High Commissioner to Bangladesh and former Ambassador to Nepal |
64 |
Jayashree Mukherjee |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra |
65 |
Shiv Shankar Mukherjee |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former High Commissioner to the United Kingdom |
66 |
Gautam Mukhopadhaya |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Myanmar |
67 |
Nagalsamy |
IA&AS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Accountant General, Tamil Nadu & Kerala |
68 |
B.M. Nanta |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Govt. of Himachal Pradesh |
69 |
Ramesh Narayanaswami |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of NCT of Delhi |
70 |
P. Joy Oommen |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of Chhattisgarh |
71 |
Amitabha Pande |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Inter-State Council, GoI |
72 |
Maxwell Pereira |
IPS (Retd.) |
Former Joint Commissioner of Police, Delhi |
73 |
G.K. Pillai |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Home Secretary, GoI |
74 |
Gurnihal Singh Pirzada |
IAS (Resigned) |
Former MD, Punjab State Electronic Development & Production Corporation, Govt. of Punjab |
75 |
R. Poornalingam |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Ministry of Textiles, GoI |
76 |
Rajesh Prasad |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to the Netherlands |
77 |
T.R. Raghunandan |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Joint Secretary, Ministry of Panchayati Raj, GoI |
78 |
N.K. Raghupathy |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Chairman, Staff Selection Commission, GoI |
79 |
V. Ramani |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Director General, YASHADA, Govt. of Maharashtra |
80 |
M. Rameshkumar |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Member, Maharashtra Administrative Tribunal |
81 |
K. Sujatha Rao |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Health Secretary, GoI |
82 |
M.Y. Rao |
IAS (Retd.) |
|
83 |
Madhukumar Reddy A. |
IRTS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Executive Director, Railway Board, GoI |
84 |
Vijaya Latha Reddy |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Deputy National Security Adviser, GoI |
85 |
Julio Ribeiro |
IPS (Retd.) |
Former Director General of Police, Govt. of Punjab |
86 |
Aruna Roy |
IAS (Resigned) |
|
87 |
Manabendra N. Roy |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal |
88 |
A.K. Samanta |
IPS (Retd.) |
Former Director General of Police (Intelligence), Govt. of West Bengal |
89 |
Deepak Sanan |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Adviser (AR) to Chief Minister, Govt. of Himachal Pradesh |
90 |
Tilak Raj Sarangal |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Secretary (Elections) and Financial Commissioner, Revenue (Appeals) |
91 |
G.V. Venugopala Sarma |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Odisha |
92 |
N.C. Saxena |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Planning Commission, GoI |
93 |
A. Selvaraj |
IRS (Retd.) |
Former Chief Commissioner, Income Tax, Chennai, GoI |
94 |
Ardhendu Sen |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Chief Secretary, Govt. of West Bengal |
95 |
Aftab Seth |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Japan |
96 |
Aruna Sharma |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary, Steel, GoI |
97 |
Ashok Kumar Sharma |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Finland and Estonia |
98 |
Ashok Kumar Sharma |
IFoS (Retd.) |
Former MD, State Forest Development Corporation, Govt. of Gujarat |
99 |
Navrekha Sharma |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Indonesia |
100 |
Raju Sharma |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Member, Board of Revenue, Govt. of Uttar Pradesh |
101 |
Avay Shukla |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Additional Chief Secretary (Forests & Technical Education), Govt. of Himachal Pradesh |
102 |
K.S. Sidhu |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Secretary, Govt. of Maharashtra |
103 |
Mukteshwar Singh |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Member, Madhya Pradesh Public Service Commission |
104 |
Tara Ajai Singh |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Additional Chief Secretary, Govt. of Karnataka |
105 |
A.K. Srivastava |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Administrative Member, Madhya Pradesh Administrative Tribunal |
106 |
Prakriti Srivastava |
IFoS (Retd.) |
Former Principal Chief Conservator of Forests & Special Officer, Rebuild Kerala Development Programme, Govt. of Kerala |
107 |
Parveen Talha |
IRS (Retd.) |
Former Member, Union Public Service Commission |
108 |
Anup Thakur |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Member, National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission |
109 |
P.S.S. Thomas |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Secretary General, National Human Rights Commission |
110 |
Ashok Vajpeyi |
IAS (Retd.) |
Former Chairman, Lalit Kala Akademi |
111 |
Rudi Warjri |
IFS (Retd.) |
Former Ambassador to Colombia, Ecuador and Costa Rica |
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