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Bofors: The Return of The Smoking Gun

George Iype in New Delhi

The Central Bureau of Investigation has sent a fresh letter to the Swiss government asking it to immediately dispatch the second set of secret bank documents relating to the controversial Bofors case.

CBI Director R C Sharma's communication to Rudolf Wyss, deputy director of the Swiss government's department of police matters, states that the absence of the remaining documents has hindered the investigation into the Bofors scandal in India.

The Swiss authorities handed over the first bunch of more than 500 pages of secret bank documents to India in January. Though the second set of papers were to be delivered in June, the Swiss authorities failed to do so, saying the matter is still pending in the cantonal courts there.

The remaining papers in Switzerland are "very crucial documents for making a foolproof case on the Bofors," the CBI spokesperson told Rediff On The NeT on Saturday.

Since the evidence available from the first set of documents is incomplete, he said it has led to considerable delay in the prosecution of the accused in the Bofors scandal.

The CBI's Special Investigation Team -- which scrutinised the earlier lot of bank documents during the tenure of then agency director Joginder Singh -- had identified five alleged recipients of the multi-million dollar Bofors payoffs -- Italian businessman Ottavio Quattrocchi and his wife Maria, former Bofors agent Win Chadha, his son Harsh and late wife Kanta.

The SIT report also indicted Rajiv Gandhi, on the ground that he had an intimate association with Quattrocchi and allowed the Italian free access to the Prime Minister's Office.

The investigating agency has already questioned a number of politicians, former army generals and key Rajiv aides to find out who influenced the then prime minister to sign the defence contract with A B Bofors of Sweden.

After submitting the report to the government, the CBI had sought sanction for prosecuting former defence secretary S K Bhatnagar and Gopi Arora, former special secretary in the PMO, in connection with the Bofors case. But the government has not yet approved their prosecution, on the ground that the CBI cannot build up a strong case with the available evidence.

CBI sleuths believe the second set of papers will help them build a foolproof case to begin prosecution of the Bofors accused. They expect the remaining papers will also identify the appellants who are blocking the transfer of documents in the Swiss courts.

Meanwhile, the Union law ministry has sat on the SIT report for the past two months, without issuing any directions to the CBI on its future course of action.

A three-member committee of secretaries of the ministries of defence, home and personnel had earlier screened the SIT report and submitted it to the law ministry for its expert opinion.

Sources said the law ministry is proceeding on the Bofors report very cautiously as the government does not want the CBI findings to be rejected in court as it happened with the Jain hawala case.



EARLIER REPORTS: The Smoking Gun

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