Hindustan Times (Delhi)

PONGAL FESTIVITY SETS STAGE FOR TN POLITICAL BATTLE AS BIGGIES LINE UP

- Neeraj Chauhan letters@hindustant­imes.com

On Pongal, the traditiona­l harvest festival of Tamils and one of the biggest festivals in poll-bound Tamil Nadu, politics took centre stage with Bharatiya Janata Party president JP Nadda and former Congress president Rahul Gandhi in the state, seeking to demonstrat­e that their respective parties respect the cultural identity of a region where neither is a serious contender in the elections.

Gandhi, accompanie­d by DMK youth wing secretary Udhaynidhi Stalin, watched the traditiona­l sport of Jallikattu (bull taming) in Avaniapura­m, Madurai, and said the arrangemen­ts were safe for the bull and the participat­ing youngsters.

“I’ve come here to give a message to those people who think that they can run roughshod over the Tamil people, push aside Tamil language and culture,” said Gandhi.

But, he was quickly reminded by BJP’S national secretary and the party’s Tamil Nadu in-charge CT Ravi that in 2011, the Congress called Jallikattu barbaric and sought to ban it.

Nadda, sporting the traditiona­l veshti and white shirt combo preferred by politician­s in the state, also took part in a programme to celebrate Pongal in Chennai.

CHENNAI:

The Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) has asked the ministry of defence (MOD) to speed up the sanction it needs to give to prosecute former defence secretary Shashi Kant Sharma and four Indian Air Force (IAF) officers in the case related to alleged irregulari­ties in the purchase of Agustawest­land helicopter­s, people familiar with the developmen­t said.

MOD is learnt to have informed the central agency that the request is under considerat­ion and will be processed soon, the people added on condition of anonymity.

After completing its investigat­ion against Sharma and four IAF officers – former air vice marshal Jasbir Singh Panesar, deputy chief test pilot S A Kunte, wing commander Thomas Mathew and former group captain N Santosh -- a Special Investigat­ion Team handling the probe sought sanction for their prosecutio­n because it wanted to file a supplement­ary chargeshee­t in the case.

The agency recently decided to send a reminder to the MOD asking it to expedite the sanction so that the supplement­ary charge-sheet, which is almost ready, can be filed at the earliest,

NEW DELHI:

said a CBI officer who didn’t want to be named.

In the case, bribes were allegedly paid to middlemen when India agreed to buy 12 Agustawest­land helicopter­s at an estimated cost of ₹3,600 crore.

The purchase, cleared in 2010 by the previous United Progressiv­e Alliance government, envisaged replacing ageing Mi-8 choppers to ferry VVIPS such as the President, vice-president, Prime Minister and the other dignitarie­s.the deal was eventually cancelled in January 2014.

Pending sanctions of prosecutio­n is a key reason the CBI is often not able to file chargeshee­ts in such cases on time.

In fact, the anti-corruption agency has been waiting for sanction from the Centre and several state government­s to prosecute at least 110 politician­s and government officials for over four months in at least 73 cases.

Prominent cases in which the concerned department is yet to decide on sanction include the Narada sting case against four Trinamool Congress (TMC) leaders -- Sougata Roy, Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar, Prasun Banerjee and former TMC leader Suvendu Adhikar -- and the case of alleged irregulari­ties in coal block allocation­s against former Jharkhand chief minister Madhu Koda.

In its probe against Shashi Kant Sharma, CBI has found that the retired Indian Administra­tive Service officer, as joint secretary (air) in MOD, played a key role in most of the decisions taken since 2005 until 2010 that skewed the selection in favour of Agustawest­land .

The agency has alleged that Sharma, who had become director general (acquisitio­n) by September 2006, approved the request for proposal (RFP) document for the contract as well as the technical evaluation committee (TEC) report for the field trials.

Sharma didn’t respond to an email query . He had defended himself against the allegation­s last year, saying: “I had a long unblemishe­d service record of over 40 years and nobody can blame me for any malafide action or decision. I strongly and firmly deny any such frivolous allegation”.

The four former IAF officers could not be located for comment.

Retired IPS officer Neeraj Kumar, who probed 1993 Mumbai serial blasts in CBI, said, “By delaying prosecutio­n sanctions, what are ministries/department trying to prove? That they condone the corruption? Delays not only affect the trial in corruption cases but also help the accused officials.”

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