Sales tax officer held for accepting Rs 8,000 bribe

Mumbai, May 29 — A class II officer from the sales tax office in Bandra was trapped by the Anti Corruption Bureau (ACB) on Friday while allegedly accepting Rs 8,000 from a businessman. ACB sources said that Avinash Bandivadekar, attached to the survey section, was caught inside his office at the Bandra-Kurla complex while accepting the bribe.

According to the ACB, a garment manufacturer from Bandra had paid income tax and sales tax for 2008. However, his sales fell short of expectations in 2009 and he failed to pay the sales tax.

During the third week of 2010, Bandivadekar, along with some of his staff members, went to the garment manufacturing unit in Bandra and initiated action. In February, the sales tax office served the businessman a notice.

On May 21, the businessman went to the office and met Bandivadekar who allegedly told him that the sales tax office was preparing a file on the defaults made by his establishment. Bandivadekar then allegedly demanded Rs 30,000 to ‘close’ the file.

The businessman bargained the amount to Rs 10,000, before lodging a complaint with the ACB. On the ACB’s instruction, the businessman went to pay Rs 8,000 to Bandivadekar at the latter’s office at Bandra-Kurla Complex on Friday.

Enforcement Directorate to quiz Ketan Desai

New Delhi, May 21 (ANI): The former President of the Medical Council of India (MCI), Ketan Desai, will be questioned by the Enforcement Directorate from Friday for his alleged role in a bribery case involving over Rs 20 million.

The Enforcement Directorate that has booked Desai under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act was earlier granted permission by the court to interrogate him.

The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) arrested Desai on April 22 for allegedly accepting a bribe of Rs two crore to give permission to a Punjab medical college to recruit a fresh batch of students without having requisite infrastructure.

Besides Desai, three other accomplices, middleman Jitendar Pal Singh, Kamaljeet Singh, a faculty member of Gyan Sagar Medical College, and the college”s Vice Chairman Sukhvinder Singh, were also arrested.

CBI also conducted raids in Punjab and Gujarat to trace Desai”s other associates and the assets he has acquired.

This is not the first time Desai has been accused of corruption.

In 2001, he had stepped down as MCI president after the Delhi High Court indicted him on corruption charges. (ANI)

‘All powerful’ Rehman Malik in whitewash mode to quash cases against him

Islamabad, May 12 (ANI): Pakistan Interior Minister Rehman Malik has been accused of tampering with cases filed against him and for targeting officers who are not ready to toe his line.

The official record of the 1996 cases against Malik has started to disappear and FIA officials who arrested and handled him back in 1996 are now facing his wrath.

A director of FIA in Peshawar confirmed to The News that the record relating to the minister had been misplaced and it is being reconstructed, but he denied they had tampered with the previous record.

The officials have been punished and harassed so much that they have now come on record to publicly complain that the all-powerful Interior Minister is targeting them.

Tariq Malik, FIA’s deputy director, who has twice been demoted after he refused to tamper with the record about the charge sheeting of the minister, has now been transferred to Quetta from Islamabad.

Tariq being an FIA inspector had filed a source report in 1996 that led to the registration of an FIR No. 14/96 against Malik, alleging that he received two Honda cars as a bribe from Toyota Company.

The Interior Minister’s staff officer summoned Tahir Malik in the ministry six weeks ago and interrogated him on how he came to know about the cars and how was it a bribe. The staff officer then demanded of Malik that he alter his statement to help Rehman Malik get acquitted.

When he refused, in a space of two weeks, he was not only demoted again but also transferred to Quetta, a station that is seeing the pullout of all Punjabi FIA staffers after some of them were murdered there.

All these cases against Rehman Malik stand reopened after the revocation of the NRO but since the FIA is the executing agency, it is lending crucial support to cover up the past cases against their current boss.

Likewise, Sardar Azam, another assistant director, now retired, who had arrested Rehman Malik the day FIR No 14/96 was registered against him, has stated on record that his pension is being delayed as punishment. (ANI)

CBI arrests senior Home Ministry official for graft

New Delhi, Apr 28 (ANI): Senior Home Ministry official O Ravi was arrested by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Wednesday on charges of corruption.

Ravi was a 1983 batch Indian Administrative Service (IAS) officer belongs to Gujarat cadre and is currently holding the office of the Joint Secretary (Disaster Management) with the Union Home Ministry.

A CBI team, raided Ravi’s residence here this morning.

The CBI has charged Ravi of accepting a Rs 50 lakh in bribe from one Alok Khimani.

Khimani is a distiller in Daman and Diu.

He was facing huge tax evasion charges slapped on him by the present administrator of the Union Territory.

Khimani reportedly wanted to influence the current officer through Ravi.

Ravi’s name figured prominently in the media when a devastating flood hit parts of Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh in August 2009.

Ravi led one of the Central teams which visited flood affected areas to assess the damage. (ANI)

CBI remand of Medical Council of India chief extended to May 1

New Delhi, Apr.29 (ANI): A Delhi court has extended the Central Bureai of Investigation (CBI) remand of Medical Council of India (MCI) President Ketan Desai till May 1.

Three other accused – J P Singh, Sukhvinder Singh and Kawaljeet Singh – have also been remanded to CBI custody till May 1.

Desai was arrested for allegedly granting recognition to medical colleges in lieu of money.

Continuing its raids, the CBI in Mumbai seized diamonds and gold worth Rs.38 lakh from bank lockers of Desai.

The CBI also recovered property documents, including that of a shop and an office space in posh Andheri area of Mumbai.

The CBI also found that Desai and his family own five vehicles, including three high-end ones– a Toyota Camry, Honda City and Hyundai Sonata.

Desai was arrested for allegedly receiving Rs.2 crore as bribe from a Punjab-based Medical College for giving sanction to enroll students for year 2010-11 though they lacked adequate infrastructure. (ANI)

Rann failing to question hospitals plan: Oppn

The South Australian Opposition says Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is throwing money around ‘like a drunken sailor’ in a bid to attract support from the states for the federal hospitals plan.

The Opposition says the SA Government has accepted the plan at face value.

It provides for a federal takeover of Australia’s hospitals, including the sweetener for aged care.

There have been questions from other states but SA Premier Mike Rann is offering his strong support for Mr Rudd’s proposal.

SA Liberal health spokesman Duncan McFetridge says extra money is a bribe.

“Their silence on the Kevin Rudd proposal, other than tacit approval, to me indicates that they would be more than happy to hand over the SA health system to the Federal Government,” he said.

But a staff member for the Premier says Mr Rann has been negotiating with Mr Rudd and will have more questions at a Council of Australian Governments meeting next week.

Hu has been treated fairly, lawyer says

Rio Tinto executive Stern Hu is an honest man who accepted a bribe to help childhood friends, his lawyer says, as a Shanghai court mulls its verdict in the Australian’s bribery and corporate espionage trial.

Hu and his Chinese colleagues Liu Caikui, Ge Mingqiang and Wang Yong pleaded guilty to charges of receiving bribes and infringing commercial secrets.

Hu was accused of receiving bribes in two amounts that add up to more than $1 million.

His lawyer Jin Chunqing says Hu has been treated fairly.

“Stern himself explicitly and repeatedly confirmed to us that he has been fairly treated; my colleague … and I do share his opinion,” he said.

Mr Jin said the Australian had cooperated with both police and prosecutors.

“He couldn’t believe he took the two amounts between December 2008 and January 2009. He felt like he was pushed by ghosts,” Mr Jin said.

“Industry insiders, including those in the steel companies, respected him for his purity.

“But his incorruptible reputation built over 15 years at Hamersley Iron and Rio Tinto was ruined within two months.

“He is very penitent, which I believe is sincere.”

Mr Jin said Hu was approached by smaller private steel companies, who were locked out of buying iron ore from Rio Tinto because the Anglo-Australian miner prioritised large, state-run companies.

Hu told the court he had accepted the larger of the two bribes, about $870,000, from one of the smaller firms to help two childhood friends in need.

“He is a person of great personal loyalty,” Mr Jin said.

“These two [friends] had no wives and one of them was leading a hard life – therefore, he thought he should take this opportunity.

“The money was mostly to help others … though not all the money.”

Mr Jin described his client as a dutiful son who was caring for his parents and in-laws, who were all in their 80s.

Mr Jin said that after hearing Hu’s testimony this week, a prosecutor recommended the court give the Australian a lenient sentence.

“Right in the court … the prosecutor, fairly and uniquely, responded to my points positively, saying, ‘Stern Hu should receive lenient treatment on the bribery issue’,” Mr Jin said.

The Shanghai court will deliver its verdict on Monday.

Australian consular officials will be in the courtroom to hear the decision.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says the world is watching the trial, which has been widely seen as a test of the rule of law in China and has raised questions about doing business in the world’s third-largest economy.

Defence lawyers say that under Chinese law the toughest sentence for non-government officials convicted of accepting bribes is 15 years in prison.

The maximum penalty for stealing commercial secrets is seven years.

- AFP/Reuters

Australians caught in Ethiopian adoption nightmare

Australian families have made serious allegations of corruption within Australia’s inter-country adoption program with Ethiopia.

The ABC has spoken to several families who claim they have been lied to in the course of their adoption process.

They have told heartbreaking stories of their time in Ethiopia – from witnessing their new baby choking on vomit, to a young boy being kept in a bucket to stop him from moving about. One family had to pay a bribe and others found their paperwork falsified with their child’s age dramatically altered.

The families say the Federal Government has been slow to act and has not fully investigated the allegations.

When Jody was holding her baby son in her arms, she was distraught to witness an Ethiopian mother discover she had lost hers forever.

“When I was walking [out of the women's centre] a lady screamed and yelled and cried and fell to the ground,” she said.

“This mother had come back to the women’s shelter [where] she’d placed her baby for adoption. She changed her mind and came back to get it within a couple of days – but it was already gone.

“That was just heart-wrenching and I felt sick.”

She added that she thought the process was far too quick to have gone through the proper channels.

Last year Foreign Correspondent revealed corruption within US-Ethiopia adoptions, and more families have spoken out as a result.

It seems some Australians are not protected from corruption despite it being an Australian Government-run program.

The person in charge of the program is Ato Lakew Gebeyehu. ABC News Online made a number of attempts to contact Mr Gebeyehu, but was unable to do so.

Mr Gebeyehu is responsible for Koala House, a transition home for children going to be adopted by Australian families. This home, which is part of the Australian government program, is accused of not properly feeding the children and maintaining their health.

The office of Attorney-General Robert McClelland says a recent review found issues of concern within the program and is working to restructure the program.

ABC News Online has been told by a spokesman for Mr McClelland that Australia will sign a new agreement with Ethiopia, however whether Mr Gebeyehu remains in his position is still to be decided.

But the ABC has obtained documents showing the Howard government knew of serious concerns about the program in 2005 and that the Rudd government was warned again in 2008 by Brussels-based human rights organisation Against Child Trafficking.

Koala House

The families interviewed by the ABC have had their names changed because of fears they may lose their children and concerns that life will be made hard for surviving biological relatives in Ethiopia.

Australian parents pay thousands of dollars in fees, donations and aid for the care of their children in Koala House.

But all three families say their children were handed to them with a range of problems including severe malnutrition and pneumonia.

Sarah, who has adopted three Ethiopian children, believes the money she paid to care for her children never reached them.

“In our first adoption we took over about 80 kilos of aid. The majority of that was formula, and because we had a baby we also paid the formula fee for her,” she said.

“We were also asked to replace all of the formula she would have consumed during her time she was at Koala House … and it turned out she was actually fed cow’s milk and was lactose intolerant.

“She was massively malnourished when we got her. She had full-blown pneumonia because she’d been swallowing her own vomit.”

Sarah’s older daughter later explained that she was hardly fed.

“She’d get given rice and carrot mixed together as a meal of porridge for breakfast. Except for when the Australian families came … [they] would put on a big party … and when that happened, there would be so much food. But when those families went, then it’d be carrot and rice,” she said.

Jody says it was a similar story when she and her husband were in Ethiopia to collect their son from Koala House.

“Our son has attachment issues, but he was never held or cuddled until we got him. He was just picked up to be changed or had a bottle propped up on a pillow,” she said.

“We were told when we picked him up that they used to sit him in a bucket so he couldn’t learn to move around much. He’d worn all the hair off the back of his head from it rubbing against the bucket.

“A friend of ours had an older child who says they only get one meal a day, which was concerning because the amount of money that we raised for the centre. I raised thousands and thousands.”

Program reinstated

Earlier this month Mr McClelland announced he will lift a temporary suspension of the adoption program, after concerns of possible breaches of the Hague Convention on inter-country adoption.

The convention is in place to ensure the welfare of children is the priority and that international adoptions are used only as a last resort. Australia is a signatory to the convention but Ethiopia is not.

It will resume operating on April 6 with some changes made, but it appears Mr Gebeyehu will stay in charge.

Against Child Trafficking spokeswoman Roelie Post says Mr Gebeyehu was arrested in Ethiopia and held for 12 days on suspicion of trafficking children to Austria in 2008.

Ms Post says her organisation received little response from the Australian Government after alerting it to this and other alleged concerning practices.

“The children are not orphans. The paperwork is often faked. Parents are declared dead who are not dead and children are given the wrong ages,” she said.

“Our organisation sent a letter to the Australian Government with 1,600 pages attached to it with evidence of trafficking in adoptions relating to Australia and India.

“Also we alerted the Australian authorities to Ethiopia, especially to the Ethiopian representative whose name was mentioned in a trafficking case in Austria.”

Ms Post does not accept the Australian Government’s explanation that Mr Gebeyehu’s arrest was just a case of mistaken identity. She thinks there are serious issues that need to be investigated and that the case was mishandled.

“The children come from the same pool, therefore the situation [in Australia] is comparable to adoptions in the US or the Netherlands or any other country.”

Sarah says she is aware of older adoptive children recognising each other from Ethiopia and while she stops short of calling it child trafficking, she says it is “on the fringes”.

“I have heard that has happened in Australia, where children have known each other prior to coming under Lakew’s care – that’s a very big coincidence,” she said.

Blocked

All families interviewed by the ABC claim they were not supplied with paperwork and vital information about their children and were blocked by officials from finding information on biological families.

When Anne and her husband adopted their daughter, they say almost all the information about their child’s origin was falsified.

They were told she was abandoned, but when through their own search they tracked down the biological parents, they discovered this was a lie.

“The [birth parents] were both devastated, particularly the father. They were so sad to think that their child would have grown up thinking she had been abandoned by them.

“They told us that they could never have done such a thing to their child. They agonised over the decision to relinquish their daughter and they did it legitimately.

“What makes us angry is that our daughter was stripped of her history and there seems to be no valid reason for this to have happened.

“Our child was given a new name and a new birth date and was passed off as having been abandoned.”

Sarah adopted two sisters in 2002. She and her husband were told the “orphaned” children were four years old and nine months, with no living relatives.

They later found the eldest daughter was not four, but closer to eight. They also discovered the girls had a mother and that the eldest had two brothers whom she was allegedly warned never to mention.

“She told us exactly where they were and we located them two days later and the brothers told us at the time that she was eight years old,” she said.

Jody was also told that her son was abandoned and there was no information about his mother. But years later when her family returned to Ethiopia for their second adoption, they discovered this was not the case.

“With a bit of what we call African persuasion, which is $500, we managed to get a photograph, full name and full details of his birth mother,” she said.

“The whole place revolves around money under the table.”

‘Berlusconi will have to resign if immunity law overturned’

Rome, Sep. 18 (ANI): Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi would be forced to resign if laws providing him immunity are overturned by the Constitutional Court next month, his lawyers have admitted.

“If the Constitutional Court, which begins its deliberations on October 6, overturns the law there would be damage to the functions of an elected official, which could not be carried out”, Times Online quoted Glauco Nori, a state lawyer for the prime minister’s office, as saying.

The move could cause “irreparable damage” and lead to the Prime Minister’s resignation, he added.

After coming to power for the third time in 2008, Berlusconi pushed the law through Parliament, which gives immunity to the offices of Prime Minister, President and the Speakers of both houses of parliament from court trials, which was dubbed

As being “tailor-made” to shield Berlusconi from corruption charges, by the opposition, the report said.

At the time when legislation was passed, Berlusconi was being prosecuted for allegedly giving a 600,000-dollar bribe to British lawyer David Mills to provide false testimony on his behalf in corruption trials in the 1990s, it added.

Berlusconi’s trial was suspended but Mills was sentenced to 41/2 years in jail.

According to the report, the Milan prosecutor’s office had recently submitted its own memorandum to the court, challenging the immunity law as violating the principle that all citizens are equal before the law.

If the immunity law is struck off next month, corruption charges against Berlusconi are likely to be revived.

According to reports, magistrates in Milan and Palermo are also investigating Berlusconi’s suspected links to the Mafia in the 1990s. (ANI)

Railway head constable who threw boy off train arrested

Kanpur (Uttar Pradesh), Sep. 13 (ANI): A Railway Police Force (RPF) head constable, who threw a 14-year-old boy from a running train near Kurhni in Bihar last week, has been arrested after being identified by the victim.

Shahabuddin, who lost his right leg in the incident, identified head constable Rameshwar Prasad during a test identification (IT) parade at the SKMCH on Saturday.

The officer in-charge of Muzaffarpur GRP Shashibhushan Singh, a GRP inspector, besides several RPF officers were present when the identification parade was held, a private television channel reports.

All the seven RPF personnel, including the accused head constable, and five other persons were presented before the boy during the TI parade who identified Rameshwar Prasad as the one who threw him off the running Gwalior Mail.

Meanwhile, Shahabuddin’s condition is said to have deteriorated further.

Shahabuddin says that he was pushed out of the running train when he refused to give a bribe to Prasad.

A case has filed against the arrested head constable and he is being interrogated. (ANI)

CBI records Buta Singh’s statement in bribery case

New Delhi, Sep 10 (ANI): The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Thursday recorded the statement of Buta Singh, Chairman for the National Commission for Scheduled Castes (NCSC), in connection with a bribery case involving his son Sarobjit Singh.

A two-member CBI team recorded Buta Singh’s statement at his NCSC office in the Lok Nayak Bhavan in the national capital.

Heavy security arrangements were made at the Lok Nayak Bhavan during the recording of Singh’s statement.

Singh had informed the Delhi High Court on August 31 that he would appear before the CBI only after it clarified that he is required as a witness and not as an accused in the case.

Earlier, Singh, had struck a defiant note saying CBI has no authority to question a constitutional functionary having powers of a civil court, without Central Government’s sanction.

The CBI arrested Sarobjit, on July 31 for allegedly demanding a bribe of Rs one crore from a Nashik-based contractor to dispose off an atrocity case against him pending before the National Commission for Scheduled Castes (NCSC) headed by Buta Singh.

The Lok Nayak Bhavan was declared out of bounds for the public and also to the media till 2 p.m. (ANI)

Buta Singh says he is ready to be questioned by CBI

New Delhi, Aug. 31 (ANI): Former Bihar Governor Buta Singh on Monday informed the Delhi High Court that he was ready to be questioned by CBI in connection with the bribery case involving his son.

His willingness to testify comes following CBI’s clarification that the chairman of National Commission for Scheduled Castes is required to be questioned as a witness and not as an accused in the bribery case. ingh said he would be available to CBI on September 10 at 11 am at his office, and the probe agency officials can come and question him.

Justice Geeta Mittal, after recording the statement given by Singh’s counsel, disposed the matter and asked the investigating agency to question Buta Singh on the date given by him.

The High Court had on August 26 sought response from the CBI on a petition filed by Singh, who had accused the probe agency of illegally summoning him for interrogation in an alleged bribery case.

Singh had contended that he holds a post of Cabinet rank and the CBI cannot question or interrogate him without taking sanction from the Centre.

He had on August 25 approached the Delhi High Court challenging CBI’s notice to appear before it in connection with a case of alleged bribery against his son Sarobjit Singh.

Singh’s son was arrested on July 31 by CBI for allegedly demanding a bribe of one crore rupees from a Nashik- based contractor to close an atrocity case against him pending before the Scheduled Caste Commission headed by his father. (ANI)

BJP top brass meets Advani, immediate change in party leadership ruled out

New Delhi, Aug.29 (ANI): The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) top brass met senior leader L.K. Advani at his residence late on Friday night for almost two hours.

Among those who met Advani were Sushma Swaraj, Arun Jaitley, Venkaiah Naidu and Ananth Kumar.

Sources claimed that despite RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat chalking out a succession plan for the BJP, there are no immediate plans to ring in changes in the leadership.

The RSS succession plan is reported to have been discussed during the meeting.

BJP leaders were reluctant to reveal to the media what exactly transpired at the meeting claiming that it was a routine meeting.

The other issue that came up for discussion was Jaswant Singh’s charge that Advani knew about and was in favour of exposing the cash for vote scam that hit Parliament in July last year, as the UPA Government was seeking a vote of confidence.

Firing a fresh salvo, Singh said Advani was “at the centre” of the cash-for-votes scam drama enacted in the Lok Sabha last year.

“It’s a great sense of pity. Here was a man who was consumed by an ambition to be Prime Minister, and that desire made him commit so many mistakes. Do you know this whole wretched thing of money for votes is a classic example of wrong decision-making and it’s extremely troubling that he did not stand up and say no? Advaniji was at the centre of this whole drama,” he told Outlook magazine.

Singh was referring to the episode when three BJP MPs displayed bundles of currency notes totaling Rs.10 million, claiming they were being offered as bribe to support the government.

Singh said the facts were clear and he stumbled on to the whole thing when Sudheendra Kulkarni, a former aide of Advani, brought a very strange looking fellow to his house.

“I was not consulted but I was appalled that Advaniji was giving the MPs the go ahead to display money in Parliament,” he said adding that Advani had two choices — either to take the money to the Speaker or into the House. But he told the MPs to display the money in Parliament.

The options left for Advani are to break his silence and publicly clarify his stand to take on his detractors or else resign as Leader of Opposition and end his political career, leaving the BJP to battle the crisis.

Advani could also stay on till BJP presidential election in December to chart out a comprehensive succession plan.

It is clear that the fault line in the BJP have widened with a number of senior leaders rebelling against the party high command. With some much infighting there seems to be three distinct camps within the BJP – the Rajnath Camp, the Advani Camp and the Vajpayee Camp. (ANI)

People forced to pay more as hoarders and profiteers make merry in Pakistan

Islamabad, Aug.26 (ANI): With the onset of the fasting month of Ramazan prices of some daily commodities have sky rocketed in Pakistan despite the government’s claim to initiate several plans to counter the massive black marketing by hoarders and profiteers.

The government has failed miserably to control the price hike and people are forced to suffer at the hands of black marketers.

Prices of sugar, one of the most important daily commodity, has shot up alarmingly to 55 to 60 rupees per kilogram.

Incidentally, about 50 percent of sugar mills in Pakistan are owned by political leaders and their close relatives including that of President Asif Ali Zardari and Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, even though people have no choice but to buy sugar at a sky high price.

Customers at Islamabad’s famous Aabpara Market complained that those who have been assigned to keep a check on the price were also a part of the dirty game because they took bribe from the shopkeepers and let them free to exploit masses.

They said gone were the days when people used to enjoy fruits, chicken and meat because nowadays one could not even buy the traditional iftar items like Pakora, Samoosa and Jalaibi, The Nation reports. (ANI)

Delhi HC seeks CBI’s response on legality of summoning Buta Singh

New Delhi, Aug 26 (ANI): The Delhi High Court on Wednesday sought response from the CBI on a petition filed by Buta Singh accusing the agency of illegally summoning him for questioning in connection with a multi crore corruption case.

Buta Singh, who holds a post of Cabinet rank, argued that the agency couldn’t question him without taking mandatory sanction from the Centre.

On this, Justice Geeta Mittal issued notice to the CBI and asked it to file its reply by Monday.

After accepting the notice, Advocate Harish Gulati, appearing for CBI, said he would take instructions from the agency on whether sanction was taken or not before summoning Singh.

Buta Singh’s son Sarabjot Singh was arrested by the agency on July 31 for allegedly demanding a bribe of three crore rupees from Nasik-based contractor Ramrao Patil.

Earlier, Buta Singh had stated: “Latest attack (by CBI) is an attempt to kill my whole political life and my political future.”

Patil had allegedly taken a loan of around 10 crore rupees from a cooperative society on behalf of over 100 persons from the Dalit community.

He allegedly pocketed the money following which a case was registered against him. (ANI)

CBI interrogates Buta Singh’s son in multi-crore corruption case

New Delhi, Aug. 24 (ANI): Buta Singh’s son Sarabjot Singh was summoned to CBI headquarters on Monday for further questioning in connection with a multi crore corruption case.

Sarobjot Singh was arrested by the agency on July 31 for allegedly demanding a bribe of three crore rupees from Nasik-based contractor Ramrao Patil.

A CBI team is also about to question the chairman of the All India Commission for Schedule Castes and Sarabjot’s Singh father, Buta Singh.

Earlier report said Buta Singh is expected to be questioned within the next two days.

“We have to question Buta Singh by August 24. His statement will be recorded as a witness and not as an accused,” CBI Joint Director (West Zone) Rishiraj Singh said on Thursday.

Though it was not immediately clear where Buta Singh’s would be questioned, sources said it may take place in Delhi.

Earlier, Buta Singh had stated: “Latest attack (by CBI) is an attempt to kill my whole political life and my political future.”

Patil had allegedly taken a loan of around 10 crore rupees from a cooperative society on behalf of over 100 persons from the Dalit community.

He allegedly pocketed the money following which a case was registered against him. (ANI)

CBI to question Buta Singh on August 24

Mumbai, Aug 20(ANI): The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Thursday said they would question National Commission for the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes Chairman Buta Singh on August 24 in connection with the Rs 1 crore bribery case involving his second son Sarobjit Singh.

“We have to question Buta Singh by August 24. His statement will be recorded as a witness and not as an accused,” said CBI Joint Director (West Zone) Rishiraj Singh.

Sarobjit was arrested on July 31 along with Anup Kumar Begi, Madan Singh Solanki and Dhukh Singh Chauhan for allegedly demanding a bribe of Rs one crore from Nasik-based contractor Ramrao Patil to close a case registered against him under the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act.

In his complaint, Patil had alleged that Sarabjot had demanded a bribe of Rs.3 crore, which was later brought down to Rs.1 crore, for withdrawal of a case, which was filed against Patil by a group of local conservancy workers employed by him. (ANI)

Gilani shrugs off Pak’s economic hardship, doubles MNA’s fund

Peshawar, June 30 (ANI): In the times when Pakistan is facing severe economic hardships, the country’s Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has given a whopping windfall to all the lower house members by doubling their annual development fund to 20 million rupees.

He gave no reason for the hike, and made a single sentence announcement before the 19-day budget session.

“I announce to double the MNAs’ fund of one crore rupees,” the Dawn quoted Gilani, as telling the National Assembly on Tuesday.

It was not immediately clear if the 100 per cent increase in the fund would apply also to the 100 members of the Senate, who until now had been on a par with their lower house counterparts for these allocations.

The practice, continuing since late 1980s, has often been described by critics as a kind of political bribe to lawmakers.

However, former PM Shaukat Aziz stopped giving funds to the opponents of military president Pervez Musharraf.

Although the hike was greeted with desk-thumping from both ruling coalition and opposition, many questions are likely to be raised about the jurisdiction of such a move by Gilani when Pakistan was facing financial stringency.

The new move was neither mentioned by the government in the fiscal budget nor was it asked for in budget debates. (ANI)

A bribery case involving Rs.25 and two decades!

New Delhi, May 27 (IANS) It took the Indian judiciary exactly 20 years, one month and one day to decide a corruption case involving an alleged bribe of Rs.25, with the Supreme Court finally giving the accused – a Kerala clerk – the benefit of doubt and acquitting him.

The case dates back to April 25, 1989, when A. Subair, a lower division clerk working in the Sub-Regional Transport Office at Attingal in Kerala, was caught allegedly accepting a bribe of Rs.25 from one Manaf for issuing a driving licence.

After he was caught, Subair was arrested and later granted bail as he faced trial before a designated anti-corruption court at Thiruvananthapuram, which held him guilty of corruption and sentenced him to one year in jail along with a fine of a few hundred rupees. But the process took almost a decade as the court pronounced its ruling in 1998.

Against the trial court’s ruling, Subair approached the Kerala High Court, which too confirmed his guilt and endorsed the punishment given by the trial court. But here too, the court took its own sweet time and gave the ruling in 2004.

Subair eventually approached the apex court, which pronounced its verdict Tuesday and acquitted him of the charges of accepting the bribe, giving him the benefit of doubt.

But a closer scrutiny of the apex court ruling reveals how the snail’s pace of judiciary may have helped Subair escape the clutches of law.

As Subair’s trial initially stretched up to a decade, complainant Munaf left India for the Gulf in pursuit of better opportunities and this resulted in the prosecution losing one of its prime witnesses.

Though the trial court and then also the high court held Subair guilty of accepting the bribe, ignoring the prosecution’s inability to produce Munaf to depose before them, the apex court pointed out in its ruling that absence of Munaf rendered the prosecution unable to prove if Subair at all demanded the bribe, a must for his conviction under the anti-corruption law.

By and by some other crucial witnesses too were unable to recall the minute details of the incident. This resulted in the trial court declaring some more crucial witnesses hostile.

Though the trial court and high court convicted Subair, ignoring various weaknesses in the prosecution version, the apex court pointed out those weaknesses and eventually ended up acquitting him.