AGMUT Cadre Reshuffle: 49 Officers Shifted To Delhi, J&K, Ladakh, Goa & UTs

Parijat Tripathi
AGMUT Cadre

Massive AGMUT Cadre Reshuffle: 49 IAS and IPS Officers Transferred Across Delhi, J&K, Ladakh, Goa and Multiple Union Territories

In one of the most extensive administrative reshuffles in recent years, the Central Government has ordered a large-scale reallocation of officers belonging to the AGMUT cadre, transferring 49 senior civil servants across multiple Union Territories and states. The sweeping exercise involves 33 IAS officers and 16 IPS officers from various batches and is aimed at strengthening governance, balancing cadre exposure, and improving administrative effectiveness in sensitive and strategically significant regions.

The reshuffle spans Delhi, Jammu & Kashmir, Ladakh, Goa, Arunachal Pradesh, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Puducherry, Mizoram, Chandigarh, Lakshadweep and Dadra & Nagar Haveli & Daman & Diu (DNH&DD).

Major IAS Postings to Delhi

A significant number of IAS officers have been posted to the national capital to reinforce the Delhi administration:

Sanjeev Khirwar (1994) – from Ladakh to Delhi

Santosh D. Vaidya (1998) – from Jammu & Kashmir to Delhi

Padma Jaiswal (2003) – from Puducherry to Delhi

Yashpal Garg (2008) – from Arunachal Pradesh to Delhi

Sanjeev Ahuja (2008) – from Goa to Delhi

Niraj Kumar (2010) – from Jammu & Kashmir to Delhi

Satyendra Singh Dursawat (2012) – from Andaman & Nicobar to Delhi

Aman Gupta (2013) – from Andaman & Nicobar to Delhi

Rahul Singh (2013) – from Lakshadweep to Delhi

Arjun Sharma (2015) – from Andaman & Nicobar to Delhi

Saloni Rai (2016) – from Jammu & Kashmir to Delhi

Hari Kallikkat (2018) – from Chandigarh to Delhi

Vishakha Yadav (2020) – from Arunachal Pradesh to Delhi

Azharuddin Zahiruddin Qazi (2020) – from Andaman & Nicobar to Delhi

Cheemala Shiva Gopal Reddy (2020) – from Mizoram to Delhi

IAS Officers Posted to Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh

To reinforce administrative leadership in Jammu & Kashmir:

Ashwani Kumar (1992) – from Delhi to J&K

R. Alice Vaz (2005) – from Delhi to J&K

Anjali Sehrawat (2013) – from Delhi to J&K

Sagar D. Dattatray (2014) – from DNH&DD to J&K

Akriti Sagar (2016) – from Arunachal Pradesh to J&K

Kumar Abhishek (2016) – from Delhi to J&K

Transfers to Ladakh include:

Shurbir Singh (2004) – from Delhi to Ladakh

Baseer Ul Hag Chaudhary (2015) – from J&K to Ladakh

IAS Movements Across Goa, Puducherry, Mizoram and Andaman & Nicobar

Michael M. D’Souza (2015) – from Ladakh to Goa

Nikhil U. Dessai (2016) – from DNH&DD to Goa

Ankita Mishra (2018) – from Goa to Arunachal Pradesh

Kinny Singh (2014) – from Delhi to Puducherry

Ravi Dadhich (2014) – from Delhi to Mizoram

Hemant Kumar (2013) – from Delhi to Andaman & Nicobar

Vandana Rao (2015) – from Delhi to Andaman & Nicobar

Major IPS Reallocation

Several IPS officers have been transferred to Delhi:

Ajit Kumar Singla (2004) – from Puducherry to Delhi

R. P. Meena (2013) – from Arunachal Pradesh to Delhi

Rahool Alwal (2014) – from Mizoram to Delhi

Shobhit D. Saksena (2015) – from J&K to Delhi

Niharika Bhatt (2015) – from Andaman & Nicobar to Delhi

Sachin Kumar Singhal (2017) – from Arunachal Pradesh to Delhi

Isha Singh (2021) – from Puducherry to Delhi

IPS Postings to Jammu & Kashmir, Arunachal Pradesh and Goa

To Jammu & Kashmir:

Prashant Priya Gautam (2013) – from Delhi

Sudhanshu Dhama (2016) – from Arunachal Pradesh

Sunny Gupta (2020) – from Andaman & Nicobar

To Arunachal Pradesh:

Mangesh Kashyap (2009) – from Delhi

Sandhya Swamy (2016) – from Delhi

Achin Garg (2019) – from Delhi

Akshat Kaushal (2018) – from Goa

To Goa:

S. M. Prabhudessai (2014) – from Arunachal Pradesh

Shruti Arora (2018) – from Ladakh

Other IPS transfers include:

Rajiv Ranjan Singh (2010) – from Delhi to Chandigarh

Rajinder Kumar Gupta (2014) – from J&K to Puducherry

Cadre Management and Administrative Balancing

Officials stated that the reshuffle is part of a routine but strategically significant cadre management exercise under the AGMUT framework. The objective is to ensure balanced administrative exposure, strengthen governance in sensitive regions, and deploy experienced officers where their expertise can deliver maximum public value.

 

Share This Article
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *