CBI accuses Rajiv Gandhi in Bofors chargesheet
George Iype in Delhi
The Central Bureau of Investigation's much-awaited report on the
controversial Bofors case has listed former
prime minister Rajiv Gandhi as accused number 15 in the multi-million
dollar gun purchase scandal. The report, however, has
failed to prove any corruption charges against the late Congress leader.
Legal experts say the CBI's chargesheet against Gandhi will not
entangle his widow Sonia Gandhi and children in court cases.
Though Gandhi cannot be prosecuted for keeping the Bofors deal under wraps
as he was assassinated in May 1991, the CBI charges will certainly cause
acute embarrassment to Sonia, who recently joined
the Congress party.
CBI sources said Gandhi's name was listed in the Bofors report
as he was "a vital link to seek the prosecution" of Italian businessman
Ottavio Quattrocchi. The late prime minister has been accused
of hatching a conspiracy to cause willful loss to the state exchequer
by allowing Quattrocchi and Bofors middleman Win
Chadha to strike the defence deal with A B Bofors of Sweden.
While Quattrocchi, who was a close friend of the Gandhi family, allegedly
received Rs 90 million, Chadha pocketed Rs 200 million for striking the defence deal with the Indian government and the Swedish arms manufacturer.
CBI Director Joginder Singh submitted the Bofors report to the
government on Monday. Running into
300-hundred pages, the report contains statements of 42 witnesses
and suspects involved in the Rs 64 million howitzer gun deal.
Among those examined by the CBI included former
Union ministers Arun Singh and Arun Nehru,
former army chief General K Sundarji and former defence secretary
S K Bhatnagar.
The CBI chargesheet is based on two sets of secret
bank documents received by the Indian authorities
from the Swiss government in January. Besides
Gandhi, it has named former federal minister
Madhavsinh Solanki, former special secretary to Gandhi, Gopi
Arora, Bhatnagar,
Quattrocchi and wife Maria, Win Chadha, his late wife Kanta and
son Harsh Chadha as the main accused.
While the government is yet to examine the CBI report before giving
orders for the prosecution of the accused,
the Congress has begun pressurising Prime
Minister Inder Kumar Gujral to put the report
under hold.
Congress president Sitaram Kesri met Law
Minister Ramakant Khalap twice in the
past two days to seek the legal posture that the government is
planning to take on the report.
Kesri's political advisor Tariq Anwar told Rediff
On The NeT that the CBI is dragging Rajiv Gandhi's
name into the Bofors report "without any substantive evidence."
"The CBI report does not hold Gandhi of taking any bribe.
Therefore, including Gandhi's name in the Bofors
report is a politically motivated decision by the CBI," he
said. Adding further he said that the CBI machinations will not affect the
image of the Congress.
Many believe the fear of a Congress revolt against the government
may force Gujral to either ask the CBI
to go slow on the Bofors prosecution or ask for more clinching
evidence against Rajiv Gandhi.
The CBI report is said to be fraught with loose ends because it has failed to establish that bribes were paid to any Indian government official. CBI sources said the agency's report is not "final" as more disclosures are expected from the third set of bank documents expected from the Swiss government shortly.
The agency recently sent letters rogatories to a number of tax havens like Panama, Channel Island, Isle of Man and Leichinstein, where the payoffs had travelled from the coded Swiss bank accounts. But it has not yet received any responses from these countries.
In his hurry to submit the report to the government, the CBI director did not wait for the defence ministry's permission to declassify some 15 defence files which he had demanded three weeks back.
Singh is scheduled to retire in October. But he fears that he will be unceremoniously removed by the Gujral government because of his preoccupation with politically
sensitive cases like Bofors and the Bihar fodder scam.
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