The Sunday Guardian

‘HIGHER-UPS MAY BE SEEKING TO RESCUE CHIDAMBARA­M IN AIRCEL-MAXIS CASE’

- CONTINUED FROM P1

O.P. Saini had said on 1 October.

However, even by the next hearing on 26 November, the agency was unable to secure the sanctions which have to come from the DoPT and the respective parent state government­s of the concerned officials.

Judge Saini, in his 26 November order, while giving the second and perhaps the last such “extension” said, “Sanction relating to accused No. 1 P. Chidambara­m has been filed. It is submitted that sanction relating to remaining five public servants accused in this case is still being awaited and may be received within two weeks. Adjournmen­t prayed for filing sanction relating to remaining public servants allowed. Accordingl­y, put up the matter for further proceeding­s on 18.12.2018 at 10:00 AM, as prayed.”

The repeated failure of the agency to get the sanctions against the IAS officials has led to questions as to whether or not the agency was facing hindrance from within the Central government, or whether the agency was truly serious enough to seek sanctions. If convicted, the offences entail a maximum punishment of seven years.

The CBI’s conduct in the entire case has been “lethargic” from the beginning, as a senior agency official said, as it took the agency more than six years to file the charge sheet, in July 2018, after the case was registered in 2012.

Chidambara­m, in his defence, which he has filed in the case, has said that the “FIPB was chaired by the Secretary, Economic Affairs and included four other secretarie­s (industry, commerce, external affairs and overseas Indian affairs) and the secretary of the administra­tive ministry. Five of them were among the senior most IAS officers and the sixth was a senior IFS officer of the Ministry of External Affairs. Each one of them had a long and distinguis­hed record of service. The recommenda­tions of the FIPB were submitted to the Ministry of Finance where they were once again examined by the junior officers and then by the Additional Secretary and the Secretary before the file was put up to the Minister. Each file put up to the Minister would usually contain a number of cases and the recommenda­tions of the FIPB and of the Secretary, Economic Affairs.”

In March, this newspaper had written about the role of bureaucrat­s under watch in the case in the article, Agencies are monitoring Chidambara­m’s top babus, naming some of the officials who had allegedly played a key role in the case, including Ashok Chawla and Ashok Jha.

Chidambara­m is accused of misusing his office as Finance Minister in 2006 to clear foreign investment deals in exchange of which his son Karti Chidambara­m was given kickbacks. The agency alleged that the former Finance Minister had given approval to a foreign firm for a proposal worth Rs 3,500 crore, when only the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs was empowered to clear proposals worth above Rs 600 crore.

The 25-year- old FIPB, which was abolished in 2017, was a single window clearance for FDI proposals and comprised Secretarie­s from Department of Economic Affairs, Department of Industrial Policy & Promotion, Ministry of Small Scale Industries, Department of Revenue, Department of Commerce, Ministry of External Affairs and Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs. The maximum say in the decision given by the FIPB, sources said, apart from the Finance Minister was of the Secretary DEA.

In May 2007, Duvvuri Subbarao, a 1972 batch IAS officer of the Andhra Pradesh cadre, was appointed as Secretary, Department of Economic Affairs (DEA) after the retirement of Finance Secretary Ashok Jha. Prior to the assignment, Subbarao was working as Secretary to the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council.

In September 2008, Ashok Chawla, a Gujarat-cadre IAS officer of the 1973 batch was appointed Secretary to the Department of Economic Affairs in the Ministry of Finance. Earlier, Chawla was Additional Secretary, Economic Affairs, from April 2005 to January 2007.

Later on, Subbarao went on to become the Governor of RBI, while Chawla became chairman of the Competitio­n Commission of India and was later appointed as the chairman of the National Stock Exchange (NSE) in May 2016, a position he holds presently.

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