6.India's position requires significant enhancement of capacity and resources.
•Additionally, under certain circumstances the nation faces certain sensitive investigative
•and legal processes attendant to important money-laundering cases, requiring extradition of
•fugitive offenders, which requires a continuum. The Directorate of Enforcement has sole
•jurisdiction to investigate money-laundering offences in India and co-ordination with global
•counter-parts, at times it becomes self-defeating to have tenure restriction at supervisory
•and decision-making position considering that at the level of international co-ordination, it is
•the personal individual knowledge, information and diplomacy which are required more than
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•just institutional knowledge and information. Considering that the Director of Enforcement
•and Director, CBI are important part of the concerted global actions against corruption and
•money-laundering, legal provisions or service rules restricting their tenure may be
counterproductive.In certain situations, their tenure may need to be extended beyond the
•initial fixed terms. At the same time, it is rational to have an upper limit to the tenure of such
•appointments to maintain independence. The positive outcome in India's mutual evaluation
•is critical for the financial future of the country. Further, there is every possibility of such
•global contingencies occurring in the future and therefore, amendments in the Central Vigilance
•Commission Act, 2003 are necessitated to meet such contingencies whenever it arises, with
•certain in-built safeguards.