PART I
CHAPTER VII
Deputation out of India
F.R. 50. No deputation of Government servant out of India shall be sanctioned without the previous approval of the Central Government.
F.R. 51(1) When a Government servant is, with proper sanction, temporarily deputed for duty out of India either in connection with the post held by him in India or in connection with any special duty on which he may temporarily be placed, he may be allowed by the President to draw during the period of deputation the same pay which he would have drawn had he remained on duty in India:
Provided that a Government servant, who is placed on deputation while already on leave out of India on average pay, may be required by the President to continue to be on leave, in which case he shall be given during that period, in addition to his leave salary, an honorarium of one-sixth of the pay which he would have drawn had he remained on duty in India; the cost of passages from and to India shall be borne by him.
NOTE. — The portion of the pay which a Government servant may be permitted to draw in foreign currency while on deputation abroad will be determined in accordance with orders issued by the President in this regard from time to time.
(2) A Government servant on deputation may also be granted a compensatory allowance in a foreign country of such amount as the President may think fit.
(3) The foreign exchange equivalent of the pay, honorarium or Compensatory Allowance admissible under sub-rule (1) or sub-rule (2) shall be calculated at such rate of exchange as the President may by order prescribe.
F.R. 51-A. When a Government servant is with proper sanction deputed for duty out of India to hold a regularly constituted permanent or quasi-permanent post, other than a post borne on the cadre of the service to which he belongs, his pay shall be regulated by the orders of the Central Government.