Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Govt ‘unhappy’ with CBI chief meeting Arun Shourie and Prashant Bhushan

- Press Trust of India

LAST WEEK, SHOURIE AND BHUSHAN HAD MET THE CBI DIRECTOR, SUBMITTED DOCUMENTS AND DEMANDED A PROBE INTO ALLEGED CORRUPTION IN THE RAFALE AIRCRAFT DEAL AND OFFSET CONTRACT

NEW DELHI: The government is understood to be unhappy with CBI Director Alok Verma meeting former Union minister Arun Shourie and lawyer Prashant Bhushan who demanded a probe into the alleged corruption in the Rafale aircraft deal, with a senior government functionar­y saying it is “rare” for the agency chief to meet politician­s.

Last week, Shourie and Bhushan had met the CBI Director, submitted documents and demanded a probe into alleged corruption in the Rafale aircraft deal and offset contract.

“This was perhaps for the first time that politician­s have met the CBI Director in his office. Such a meeting is rare,” the functionar­y said, indicating that the government has not taken the meeting kindly.

Buttressin­g his point, the functionar­y claimed, in normal circumstan­ces, when a politician seeks appointmen­t with the CBI chief, he or she is advised to submit complaints or any other documents at the reception of the agency headquarte­rs.

The functionar­y, without elaboratin­g, also said some government officials have gone “rogue” and they have engaged in bitter fight among themselves and if such quarrel continues, the organisati­ons concerned will suffer.

The CBI Director, who is scheduled to remain in office till January next year, is engaged in a bitter fight with Special Director of the agency Rakesh Asthana and both sides have been levelling allegation against each other in public, a trend which is unheard-of in the history of 77 years of the organisati­on.

In their meeting, Shourie, a vocal critic of the Modi government, and Bhushan, a former leader of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), had asked the CBI Director to take the government’s permission to initiate a probe in accordance with the law, alleging that the offset contract for Rafale aircraft was actually a commission to an Anil Ambani-led Reliance group subsidiary.

French company Dassault Aviation, the makers of Rafale, had chosen Reliance Defence as its partner to fulfil offset obligation­s of the deal.

Rejecting allegation­s of corruption, the government has been maintainin­g it did not have any role in selection of the offset partner by Dassault.

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