The Sunday Guardian

‘IMPORTANT BOFORS FILES WERE MISPLACED DELIBERATE­LY’

- ABHINANDAN MISHRA NEW DELHI

A six-member parliament­ary committee, which is looking into the non-compliance of certain aspects of the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General or CAG report on the 1986 Bofors howitzer gun deal, has stated that a systematic failure, amounting to criminalit­y, ensured that the law agencies could not reach the Indian nationals who were behind the scam and were allegedly given bribes.

“Important files were deliberate­ly misplaced and no real effort was done to locate them. The people who were responsibl­e for the safety of these files need to be investigat­ed; a criminal investigat­ion needs to be started against them. The investigat­ion needs to be done by the Ministry of Defence. It is in this context that the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) should be asked to continue its work in the case, although it had been asked to stop by the UPA government in 2005,” a source, who is aware of the proceeding­s of the committee, told The Sunday Guardian.

The 19-page CAG report on the March 1986 Bofors deal, a Rs 1,700 crore gun deal in which certain people allegedly got commission­s to the tune of almost 14% of the total deal, had pointed out many glaring loopholes in it, including the last minute change to go for Bofors.

“Army Headquarte­rs (HQ) had indicated on as many as six occasions between December 1982 and October 1985, their preference for the (French) Sofma gun. However, (it) reversed its preference in February 1986 and recommende­d Bofors. Neither the need nor the reason for the fresh evaluation is clear,” the CAG had observed. It also noted that “The defence secretary, in his note of March 22, 1986, wrote to the prime

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