"Despite my firm warning to CS by email not to rush d transfer order he did. C encl rules. He abetted an admin breakdown," she tweeted.
She was referring to the March 30 order issued by Chief Secretary Manoj Parida replacing Municipal Commissioner R Chandrasekheran, whom she later reinstated after terming the transfer order as invalid.
Bedi, who has been issuing a series of statements since then explaining her stand, said when a Chief Secretary of a Union Territory "decides to side step rules & processes to defy lawful instructions, dependent on the case, can cause adm breakdown..."
Bedi also shared on twitter two e-mails she had sent to her Secretary G Theva Neethi Dhas in which she had said the matter fell under the purview of the Lt Governor.
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Raking up another issue, the former IPS officer said that as per reports of Provident Fund officials, there was 'default' by PSUs of Puducherry in provident fund remittences to the tune of Rs 36.23 crores.
She said the Union Territory needed a committee on lines of Shunglu panel (on AAP government in Delhi) to look into the way it was being administered.
"Pudduchery also needs a 'Shunglu Committee' to look into way UT is being administered. Latest is (Rs) 36.23 Crores of PF of employees defaulted!," Bedi tweeted.
"It's not only defaulted, its collected but not deposited in officers acct (accounts) as reported by PF officers," she said in the tweet.
She said: "For the management of Puducherry it is vital that the bureaucracy plays its neutral course and places right rules for administration and political leadership to take considered decisions and not sidesteps as has been done by Chief Secretary of Puducherry which has caused breakdown of administrative work."
Chief Minister V Narayanasamy, who virtually questioned the Lt Governor's contention that she alone has the powers to appoint UT officials, had on April 2 asserted that the Speaker's order was final on Chandrasekaran's removal.
Bedi has been at loggerheads with the Narayanasamy Ministry over various issues since the UT government took charge in May last year after assembly elections.