Oman Daily Observer

Vadra made Rs 50 cr without spending a paisa

-

NEW DELHI: Congress President Sonia Gandhi’s son-in-law Robert Vadra made an “illegal profit” of over Rs 50 crore from a 2008 land deal without investing a penny, according to a panel that probed suspect Haryana land deals.

The Economic Times citing unnamed people familiar with the S N Dhingra commission report said the committee had probed transactio­ns between Onkareshwa­r Properties and Vadra-owned Skylight Hospitalit­y and subsequent­ly between Skylight and developer DLF.

The Dhingra commission investigat­ed over 20 properties said to have been purchased by Vadra and his companies, said the paper.

The panel has observed an alleged collusion between dealers and the then Congress government of Bhupinder Singh Hooda, aimed at benefiting Vadra’s Skylight. The commission was set up by the Manohar Lal Khattar’s BJP government in May 2015 to look into the grant of licences for change in land use in four villages of Gurgaon, including the licence granted to Skylight.

The Economic Times said the Vadra-owned hospitalit­y firm had bought land from Onkareshwa­r Properties.

In response to the paper, Vadra’s lawyer said the company or his client had “committed no wrong and no laws were violated.” Priyanka Gandhi Vadra in a statement on Thursday said the agricultur­al land bought by her in in Amipur village of Faridabad district or other property acquired by her had “no links to finances of her husband, his Skylight Hospitalit­y or reality major DLF”.

She said the land was purchased for Rs 15 lakh through cheque, which comes to Rs 3 lakh per acre.

The statement said the funds for the purchase came from rental income of Priyanka Gandhi Vadra from property inherited by her from her grandmothe­r Indira Gandhi.

The commission has observed that while reviewing the land transferre­d to Vadra’s company, the sale deed was executed in favour of Skylight for zero payment.

The land was then sold to DLF at a much higher price after the change in land use, resulting in the Rs 50.5-crore profit. “Other properties may have been bought with such funds and this needed to be investigat­ed,” the commission’s report is said to have concluded, according to the paper.

The report was submitted on August 31 last year. The government sent it to the Supreme Court in a sealed cover last week after a bench asked for it in connection with a pending petition on land deals.

Former Chief Minister Hooda had moved the Punjab and Haryana High Court seeking to stop “an English business daily” from publishing the news report “on the basis of the probe report”.

“It will result in irreparabl­e loss to the petitioner (Hooda), hence the newspaper be made as party and restrained from publishing contents of the report,” Hooda said in an applicatio­n that he withdrew later.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman