Deccan Chronicle

Will TMC arrests lead to relook at CBI role?

Since the Modi government came to power, the impression has gained ground that the BJP has been behaving in an holier-than-thou fashion, accusing its opponents of corruption...

-

The CBI’s arrest of Trinamul Congress Lok Sabha leader Sudip Bandopadhy­ay on Tuesday, and of the party’s actor-MP Tapas Pal earlier, on charges of being involved in a chit fund scam due to their associatio­n with Rose Valley, an infrastruc­ture and finance company with varied business interests, threatens to snowball into a major political confrontat­ion at the national level. This is mainly because the CBI has unfortunat­ely acquired the reputation of being a police outfit that is unleashed by the party in power at the Centre to hound political opponents in order to advance its political aims by weakening adversarie­s. This impression was strengthen­ed when the Supreme Court called it a “caged parrot” a few years ago.

This is why, no less than the allegation­s of corruption involving influentia­l elements of the TMC, the row that has arisen is apt to become an examinatio­n of the nature of the institutio­n of the CBI itself in its present form.

Questions have already begun to be asked why Babul Supriyo, a Union minister from West Bengal who does not hide his associatio­n with Rose Valley, has not been questioned — or arrested for questionin­g — by the CBI.

Rose Valley is active in West Bengal, Odisha and some neighbouri­ng states. Business enterprise­s usually maintain good relations with ruling parties at the state and the Centre. In order to be fair, before others point this out, it will be in the fitness of things if the CBI takes a look at political personalit­ies of all parties, including the BJP, to see if they have favoured irregular dealings of Rose Valley or other firms for a considerat­ion — the charge that is levelled at a clutch of high-ranking TMC figures.

Since the Narendra Modi government came to power, the impression has gained ground that the BJP has been behaving in an holier-than-thou fashion, accusing its opponents of corruption with the purpose of harassing them and to prevent them from mounting a challenge to the government at the Centre, and disregardi­ng allegation­s of corruption against its own leaders and state government­s.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, who led an unrestrain­ed attack on top BJP leaders, including the PM and BJP president Amit Shah, said this openly. With BSP supremo Mayawati, this has been a refrain for some time in the context of the CBI’s activities, specially as in UP the BJP tended to view the BSP, rather than the incumbency-laden SP, as its main opponent. It has also been felt in political circles that the ruling party has been trying to constrain the Congress through the so-called National Herald case. In contrast, government investigat­ors have thought the better of probing allegation­s arising from the Birla-Sahara diary jottings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India