The Asian Age

Kejriwal gets `97cr-bill from own govt

Issued formal notice from officer asking him to cough up money spent on AAP ads

- SANJAY KAW

In an unpreceden­ted move, a government officer has directed Aam Aadmi Party convenor Arvind Kejriwal, who is also the chief minister of Delhi, to deposit about `42.26 crore with the state exchequer and about `54.87 crore to other agencies to whom advertisem­ents had been released in violation of the Supreme Court guidelines. The order issued by the additional secretary has made it clear that Mr Kejriwal should immediatel­y reimburse `42.26 crore to the state exchequer and pay the remaining amount of `54.87 crore spent on advertisem­ents for which payments have not been released to the agencies concerned within 30 days.

A senior AAP functionar­y, on condition of anonymity, said that the order clearly showed the nervousnes­s of the BJP before the civic elections. “They (BJP) are scared of us. Otherwise, you often see advertisem­ents of other chief ministers in Delhi newspapers. By that logic, all those chief ministers should also be directed to refund money they had incurred on advertisem­ents which had been carried in publicatio­ns outside the territory of their respective states.” The Delhi government order has gained political significan­ce as it has come at a time when the AAP is battling hard to win the upcoming civic elections as its outcome would be termed as a referendum on the government’s two-year performanc­e. Just recently, the AAP had received another blow after lieutenant-governor Anil Baijal cancelled the allotment of its Rouse Avenue party office. The recent order has serious political overtones as it has been issued by the officer of the

The order has made it clear that Mr Kejriwal should immediatel­y reimburse `42.26 crore to the state exchequer and pay the remaining amount of `54.87 crore spent on ads for which payments have not been released

rank of the additional secretary, who reports to the secretary of his department. The secretary, in turn, reports to the chief secretary and the minister concerned, who are directly under the command of the chief minister. The order which has been issued in pursuance of the August 10, 2016, Delhi high court ruling directing the Committee on Content Regulation of Government Advertisin­g to decide within six weeks the complaint of state Congress president Ajay Maken related to the advertisem­ents released by the city administra­tion.

A three-member committee on the Content Regulation of the Government Advertisin­g had in its order on September 16, 2016, directed that the main purpose and objective of the guidelines framed by the apex court was to prevent misuse of the state funds for the projection of the image of the politician­s or the political parties in power. The order said: “Since the same has happened even after the judgement, the only way it could be reminded is to make the political party, the main beneficiar­y in the process of violation to pay for the expenditur­e incurred by the government.” The committee had also directed the city government to assess the expenditur­e it had incurred by issuing advertisem­ents outside Delhi, advertoria­ls in which AAP name was mentioned and those advertisem­ents which publicised the CM’s views and targetted the opposition parties. The order said: “The scrutiny of available records has revealed that tentativel­y an amount of `97,14,69,137 (approx) has been assessed to be incurred on advertisem­ents which may be classified into the category of violation of Supreme Court’s guidelines.”

 ??  ?? Arvind Kejriwal
Arvind Kejriwal

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