Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

PAC wants survey of defence estates, action against erring officials

- Saubhadra Chatterji and Rahul Singh letters@hindustant­imes.com

Parliament’s audit watchdog, the Public Accounts Committee (PAC), may ask the defence ministry to conduct a comprehens­ive survey of its estates every 10 years and take action against officials for shoddy management of defence land that has resulted in outstandin­g rentals amounting to ~838 crore.

A draft report of the PAC called for “strict action” against officials who failed to prevent encroachme­nt on defence land and were responsibl­e for non-renewal of leases, encouraged commercial use of defence land and did not demarcate land accurately. The period for which the arrears has been pending ranges from four to 46 years.

The defence ministry is the country’s biggest landholder, possessing 1.76 million acres, managed by the Directorat­e General of Defence Estates (DGDE).

In its draft report, a copy of which has been reviewed by HT, the PAC asked the ministry to finalise a leasing policy within three months of the report being tabled in Parliament.

Any draft report is discussed and adopted in the committee before it is tabled in Parliament. The final report may incorporat­e changes and even dissent notes from members of the panel.

Titled ‘Improper Management of Defence Land,’ the report has enumerated several cases that were highlighte­d in a string of Comptrolle­r and Auditor General reports, but no effort was made by the ministry or the DGDE to correct the irregulari­ties even after a decade.

“The committee are of the considered view that since land is precious and a limited resource, serious efforts are required for its protection and judicious use,” the draft said.

Glaring lapses have been revealed in the report. The panel found that ex-lessees were in occupation of prime defence land illegally, even after the leases expired.

It also highlighte­d cases of defence land being used for unauthoris­ed purposes such as running of hostels and shopping complexes without the ministry’s permission, a trend pointed out in a series of CAG reports.

NEW DELHI:

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