The Red Cross Divide: Why Secondment Does Not Grant a Right to Government Absorption
In the case of Pinki v. State of Himachal Pradesh and Others, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh addressed whether an employee of an independent society, deployed to a government department on secondment, possesses a legal right to permanent absorption,.
Case Background
The petitioner, an employee of the Indian Red Cross Society, had been working as a driver on a secondment basis for an ambulance at Kamla Nehru Hospital under the Health Department since March 2015. She approached the Court seeking a writ of mandamus to compel the government to permanently absorb her into the Health Department as a driver at IGMC Shimla,.
The Petitioner’s Argument
The petitioner claimed she was being discriminated against, citing instances where other individuals sent on secondment were later absorbed into the Health Department,. Specifically, she pointed to a former driver, Sh. Gian Rajta, and an employee in the Governor’s Secretariat, Smt. Sujata Macack, who had both received permanent status,.
The Court’s Findings
Justice Ajay Mohan Goel dismissed the petition, establishing several critical legal distinctions:
- Status of the Employer: The Court observed that the Indian Red Cross Society is a distinct entity, and its employees are neither government servants nor employees of state-owned bodies,.
- No Vested Right to Absorption: The mere fact that a person is deployed to a government department on a secondment basis does not confer any legal right to claim regularization or permanent absorption in that department,.
- Distinguishing Precedents: Upon investigation, the Court found that the examples cited by the petitioner were not comparable. Sh. Gian Rajta was an employee of a state-owned body (H.P. Agro Industrial Packaging India Limited), and the case involving the Governor’s Secretariat was unique because the Red Cross falls directly under the Governor’s jurisdiction and follows specific bylaws,,.
- Mandamus Limitations: The Court ruled that a mandamus cannot be issued for absorption when the petitioner remains an “outsider to the government cadre”,.
Final Conclusion
The Court held that there was no parity between the petitioner’s situation and the cited precedents. While the petition was closed, the Court did offer a sympathetic observation: if the Red Cross has no objection, the Health Department may sympathetically consider the petitioner’s case for absorption, taking into account her long period of service.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 59
Pinki V. State of Himachal Pradesh And Others (D.O.J. 02-03-2026)





