Hindustan Times (Delhi)

After FIR rush in previous stint, AAP 2.0 goes soft on corruption

ANTI-CORRUPTION BRANCH Officers say not a single case has been registered in the past 30 days

- Prawesh Lama prawesh.lama@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: In the Aam Aadmi Party’s previous tenure of 49 days, the Delhi government’s Anti-Corruption Branch had booked government and police officials and prominent people, including Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani and former Delhi CM Sheila Dikshit.

This time however, in the first 30 days of AAP government, the branch is yet to register a single FIR.

Officials at the ACB headquarte­rs in Civil Lines said the chief minister’s approach this year has come as a shock to them. FIRs haven’t been filed and even files related to the applicatio­n for filling up the vacancies of 12 inspectors have not moved.

Sources said a proposal regarding the transfer of 12 Delhi Police inspectors was submitted in the first few days and mentioned in a presentati­on the ACB chief gave to the new government.

An officer said compared to last year — when the AAP government had widely advertised the ACB helpline and urged people to approach them if any government officer sought bribes — this time not a

single advertisem­ent has been released.

“The Delhi Police has publicised their vigilance helpline and WhatsApp number through FM channels. Last year, the FM radio channels were flooded by the anti-corruption helpline ads and the chief minister’s message asking people to approach it. But this time we have not released any advertisem­ent,” an officer said.

Also gathering dust at the Delhi Secretaria­t are files related to the sanction of vehicles and laptops for investigat­ing officers. In the oathtaking ceremony at Ramlila grounds, Kejriwal had promised to restart the helpline he had launched last year. Thirtyfour days later, the promise is yet to be fulfilled.

A case related to the smuggling of liquor involving government officers had been registered on the day the new government came to power. But sources said the inspectors had been working on this case, long before Kejriwal took charge.

There had been a tussle between the Centre and the Delhi government over the jurisdicti­on of the anti-corruption branch after FIRs were filed against Ambani and then petroleum minister Deora in the gas pricing issue.

The union government had then claimed that a state government cannot investigat­e matters on the Centre’s list.

Soon after taking over this time, chief minister Kejriwal had met Union home minister Rajnath Singh about restoring powers of the ACB and the transfer of former AIIMS CVO Sanjiv Chaturvedi.

Even as the Centre is yet to take a final decision on transferri­ng Chaturvedi — who is currently working with the union ministry of environmen­t and forest — Kejriwal had been picking up officers from other states.

Kapil Singh, city magistrate of Ghaziabad and Praveen Mishra, ADM of Moradabad — both picked by Kejriwal himself — joined the Delhi government on Tuesday. Both of them are likely to be assigned to the anti-corruption body under the deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia.

 ??  ?? Delhi CM Kejriwal has asked AAP MLAs to identify public issues in their constituen­cies. SAKIB ALI/HT
Delhi CM Kejriwal has asked AAP MLAs to identify public issues in their constituen­cies. SAKIB ALI/HT
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