Twitter
Advertisement

Coal scam: State govts cold shoulder CBI request to probe PSUs

CBI sources said Jharkhand is the only state which has given the go ahead to the agency to initiate probe relating to one of the three preliminary enquiries registered by it last year in the coal block allocation scam.

Latest News
article-main
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

Nineteen of 20 states have given a cold shoulder to CBI's request for sanction to start probe into the alleged corruption in the coal blocks allocation done through the joint venture route.

CBI sources said Jharkhand is the only state which has given the go ahead to the agency to initiate probe relating to one of the three preliminary enquiries registered by it last year in the coal block allocation scam.

The probe in the scam is being closely monitored by the Supreme Court.

Based on source information, the agency had registered a preliminary enquiry in September, 2012 to look into alleged irregularities in the allocation of coal blocks to the state governments' mineral corporations and PSUs which have entered into joint ventures with private sector under the Government Dispensation Category from 1993 onwards.

Since October last year, the agency is struggling to get the nod of the states for filing regular cases in connection with the probe into joint ventures and repeated reminders have been of no help, the sources said.

Besides Jharkhand, the agency has also sent its requests to 19 states including Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Madhya Pradesh, West Bengal seeking their nod for probing the joint venture projects of their public sector undertakings but so far no response has been received from them.

The sources said while the permission is not required by the agency where central PSUs are involved, its jurisdiction does not extend to state government undertakings where it cannot proceed without the nod of the government concerned.

The sources said its probe in the coal block allocation has met a stumbling block in the absence of state governments' nod to give go ahead with the probe as it cannot register cases against the erring officers and companies.

Under the joint venture mechanism, coal blocks are allocated to a state corporation which enters in a joint venture with a private player. The benefit to the corporation is that while it makes virtually no investment, it holds majority stake as sweat equity in the venture.

CBI sources said during initial investigations it came to light that several bureaucrats after their retirement from PSUs and other senior government officials joined private companies on hefty pay scales.

The agency has also found that companies owned by relatives of influential politicians have entered into joint ventures with the state PSUs to bag these lucrative blocks.

Under the present rules, a private company can only get a coal block for captive use wherein the extracted coal has to be consumed in the companies' plant which could be power, cement or steel. Private companies cannot sell it in open market.

CBI is probing alleged irregularities in the allocation of 192 coal blocks which were made between 1993 to 2011. The agency has registered three preliminary enquiries in this connection-- related to allocation between 2006-09, allocation between 1993 to 2004 and allocations done to joint ventures.

The agency has also registered 12 FIRs related to allocations done between 2006 to 2009 with the latest one being against Jindal Steel and Power Limited, its Director and Congress MP Naveen Jindal and the then Minister of State for Coal Dasari Narayan Rao among others.

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement