While the former managing director of McKinsey & Co,
Rajat Gupta, has every right to claim that he is innocent until otherwise established in a court of law, he must adopt the same standards of good conduct in India as he has been required to in the US.
If Gupta chose to step down from the boards of various institutions he has been associated with in the US, he must do the same in India.
Gupta must step down as chairman and managing director emeritus, Indian School of Business and chairperson, Public Health Foundation of India.
Can there be one norm for the US and another for India? If Gupta acquits himself of all charges brought against him by the US Securities and Exchange Commission, he can once again stand tall and return to guide these prestigious institutions.
However, having been named a co-conspirator in an insider trading trial along with Raj Rajaratnam, founder of the Galleon Group hedge fund, on charges of giving illegal tips about Goldman Sachs Group Inc, based on information available to him as board member, Gupta is now an accused undertrial.

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