Deccan Chronicle

CBI TOLD TO FILE CASE AGAINST ARUN SHOURIE

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Jodhpur, Sept. 17: A special court here has asked the CBI to file cases against former union minister Arun Shourie and the then disinvestm­ent secretary Pradip Baijal over the sale of an ITDC hotel, allegedly at a loss of `244 crore to the exchequer.

The CBI court also directed the filing of cases against three others associated with the sale two decades back of Laxmi Vilas Palace Hotel in Udaipur, during the term of the Atal Bihari Vajpayee-led National Democratic Alliance government at the Centre.

Shourie, was the minister in charge of divestment when the property, owned by the public sector India Tourism Developmen­t Corporatio­n, was sold to Bharat Hotels Ltd, a private company.

The court recalled Shourie’s background as a journalist who has spoken against corruption in debates and interviews. This proved his double standards on the issue of corruption, special judge Puran Kumar Sharma said.

In Wednesday’s order, Sharma rejected the closure report submitted in the case by the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion in August 2019, and asked the agency to reinvestig­ate it.

He also ordered immediate attachment of Laxmi Vilas Palace by the Udaipur district magistrate. The hotel will remain under Rajasthan government’s custody until the matter is disposed of, he ordered.

Along with Shourie and Baijal, the court ordered the registrati­on of cases against Ashish Guha, the managing director of Lazard India Ltd who was the financial adviser, valuer Kantilal Karamsey of Kantilal Karamsey & Company and Jyotsana Suri, director of Bharat Hotels Ltd.

All five will be summoned before the court, the judge said.

The hotel was sold to the private company for `7.52 crore. During the CBI investigat­ion, it was valued at `252 crore, suggesting a loss of `244 crore to the exchequer.

The CBI registered a case on August 13, 2014 that some unknown officers from Department of Disinvestm­ent, in connivance with a private hotelier during 1999-2002 renovated and then sold Laxmi Vilas Palace at a throwaway price.

The court criticised the CBI for filing a closure report despite finding in its preliminar­y inquiry that the property was sold wrongly. The judge said this was deplorable.

He said the entire country looks up to the CBI as a prestigiou­s agency. Appointing the district magistrate as the receiver of the property, the judge said he would produce a report on its movable and immovable assets within three months. He will also arrange that the hotel is run by a central government institutio­n with experience in this industry. The accounts will be submitted to the court on a quarterly basis, the judge directed.

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