Lawyers to petition Supreme Court to take over Bofors investigation
George Iype in New Delhi
Some of India's top lawyers are planning to file a public interest litigation in the Supreme
Court to prevent any political interference in the investigation of the multi-million dollar Bofors
gun deal case.
Led by eminent Supreme Court lawyers Soli Sorabjee, Pran Nath Lekhi, Shanti Bhushan and
Anil Divan, the petition will ask the apex court to monitor the
Central Bureau of Investigation's probe into the Bofors documents which the Swiss
authorities handed over to the Indian government on January 21.
"We feel the Bofors case will be more transparent if it is put under judicial
supervision," Lekhi told Rediff On The NeT.
"The Bofors scandal is a synonym for political corruption of the highest order in India
and we fear that there will be attempts to cover up the names of the top people
involved in the scam," the lawyer added.
If the Supreme Court lawyers's efforts succeed, Bofors will join
the JMM payoffs case, the hawala case and the Bihar animal fodder
scam case being monitored by the court.
The senior lawyers held a discussion last week on the method of filing
the public interest litigation. It is likely the petition will be filed under
the Prevention of Corruption Act.
The CBI --which has constituted a special investigation team
to decipher the Swiss bank documents relating to alleged bribes paid in the $ 1.3 billion
howitzer gun deal -- has set itself a deadline -- April 30 -- to complete its investigation.
If the documents reveal that bribes were paid to some
Indian public servants, experts say the case will
be tried under the Prevention of Corruption Act.
Many fear since the political ramifications of the Bofors case may undermine
the CBI's investigation.
"There is no guarantee that the government or the CBI will not suppress facts relating
to the Bofors papers. So we plan to move a petition as the case involves public
morality and corruption," says Anil Divan, the public interest lawyer whom the Supreme
Court appointed amicus curiae in the Jain hawala case.
"It is a golden chance for the CBI to grill the wheeler-dealers in the Bofors kickbacks case.
But we fear political pressure could scuttle that chance," Divan told Rediff On The NeT
adding that "Indians have better faith in the judicial scrutiny of Bofors papers rather
than government scrutiny."
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