The Congress, for the second time in as many months, yesterday petitioned comptroller and auditor general (CAG) Rajiv Mehrishi, urging him to audit the Rafale deal for “corruption” before a report is submitted to Parliament.
A party delegation, including former Union Ministers Jairam Ramesh and Anand Sharma, met the comptroller and auditor general and handed over “new details and revelations” on the deal which they claimed caused loss worth Rs412.05bn to the public exchequer.
“We met the CAG with new details and revelations on the Rafale deal. More revelations are bound to come up. Each and every detail and document must go through CAG’s forensic audit before a report is submitted to Parliament. Once these facts come on record, Congress will insist on a joint parliamentary committee (JPC) to take charge of all documents and then fix accountability,” said Sharma after their nearly half-hour meeting with Mehrishi.
During its September 19 meeting with the CAG, the Congress had submitted a memorandum detailing various alleged irregularities and claimed these had caused a huge loss to the exchequer and compromised national security.
In its latest memorandum, the Congress has cited assertions made by former French president Francois Hollande on “India imposing” the choice of offset partner as well as former Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) chief T S Raju’s claims of the defence aircraft maker entering into a work-share agreement with Dassault Aviation, the makers of Rafale jets.
“Subsequent documents and revelations made at the highest level in India and France have exposed a deep-rooted sinister conspiracy and a clear-cut case of loss worth Rs412.05bn to the public exchequer.
“The public statements and assertions made by Hollande regarding the completely illegitimate influence used by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his government as also the public statement by Raju, calling the bluff and lies of Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman have unmasked the conspiracy hatched at the highest levels of the Modi government,” it said in the memorandum.
The Congress also alleged that through “statements and news plants” government sources were “trying to influence” the functioning of the comptroller and auditor general and “obstructing and interfering” with its fair and independent authority.
The Congress told the comptroller and auditor general that the deal was a “clear-cut case of loss to public exchequer and rampant corruption coupled with a concerted conspiracy”.
“All the contours of this conspiracy, corruption, endangering of national security and crony capitalism can only be uncovered thorough probe by the joint parliamentary committee (JPC).
“It is expected that the comptroller and auditor general in this case will undertake a forensic audit of original tender, the understanding reached between Dassault and HAL and the arbitrary decision of the prime minister without any mandate from Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS),” the party said urging the CAG to bring all facts on record to enable parliament to fix accountability for the “Rafale scam”.
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