RBI Governor Should Work With Govt or Quit, Says RSS Economic Wing Head

RBI Governor Urjit Patel should also “restrain his officials from making differences public,” said Ashwani Mahajan, the Swadeshi Jagran Manch chief. “If he doesn’t follow discipline it would be better for him to resign.”

New Delhi: The Reserve Bank of India governor should work in sync with the nation’s government to support economic growth or he should resign, said the head of the economic wing of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, which is the fountainhead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ruling party.

RBI Governor Urjit Patel should also “restrain his officials from making differences public,” said Ashwani Mahajan, in an interview on Wednesday. “If he doesn’t follow discipline it would be better for him to resign,” he added.

Modi’s BJP emerged from the RSS and its members work to get BJP candidates elected. Mahajan is chief of the RSS’s Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM) economic group.

Earlier in the day, some local TV channels reported that Patel could consider resigning from his post given a breakdown in relations with the government, sparking a sell-off in the rupee and bonds.

Tensions between the RBI and the government have become increasingly public after the bank’s Deputy Governor Viral Acharya said last Friday night that undermining central bank independence could be “potentially catastrophic”.

His comments indicated that the RBI was pushing back against government pressure to relax its policies and reduce its powers ahead of a general election due by May.

Also read: Explained: The Widening Rift Between the RBI and the Modi Government

In a statement, the government said on Wednesday the RBI’s independence was “an essential and accepted governance requirement” but it added that it would continue to extensively consult with the central bank to give its assessments on issues and suggest possible solutions.

Government officials on Wednesday declined to say whether it had for the first time ever used, or threatened to use, powers under the RBI Act that allow it to give the bank instructions. The Economic Times newspaper reported the government had sent letters to Patel in recent weeks exercising those powers.

Mahajan said that the government had every right to use the powers of the RBI act.

Foreign influence concerns

RSS’s Manch is critical of the central bank’s hawkish monetary stance, and has criticised the influence in recent years of foreign trained economists including former RBI governor Raghuram Rajan and former chief economic adviser at the finance ministry, Arvind Subramanian.

Mahajan said the central bank and the government should work in tandem to achieve a higher economic growth rate along with lower inflation.

While opposing the appointment of any foreign trained economists at the central bank, he said there was no dearth of “talented persons” with nationalist vision on the RBI board, one of whom could replace Patel if he resigned.

Also read: In Not-So-Subtle Speech, RBI Deputy Governor Flags Risks to Central Bank Independence

He said higher interest rates were hitting small businesses and there was a need to provide relief to save millions of jobs.

“RBI is adamant, ignoring India’s ground realities,” he said.

The Manch chief also said the RBI should agree to allow the government to take much of its surplus of cash reserves, estimated at nearly $48.67 billion, so that they could be invested, bolstering economic growth.

Earlier, a senior finance ministry official said that the government would like the central bank to pay the government a higher dividend considering the size of the reserves.

(Reuters) 

After MP’s Chouhan Elevated Saints to Minister Rank, Babas Queue up For Assembly Tickets

With their political ambitions spurred by chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan, self-styled godmen have taken centre stage before the assembly elections. Though babas have always been popular in the state, this is their first involvement in electoral politics.

Bhopal: Though the popularity of several Babas in the Hindi heartland is accepted by the Congress and the BJP, ahead of the assembly elections in Madhya Pradesh, Babas have for the first time taken centre stage.

Shloka-chanting Babas are now queuing up at the headquarters of political parties, seeking tickets for assembly polls.

Recently, when a group of sadhus dressed in saffron and white robes, their long flowing hair resting on their shoulders, entered Deendayal Parisar, the BJP headquarters, the police force which has been deputed to deal with ticket seekers were pleasantly surprised.

Also Read: With Elections Around the Corner, Vyapam Scam Bounces Back to the Centre in MP

Baba Bipin Bihari from Sagar district, accompanied by his supporters, made quite an impression as he entered the party headquarters chanting shlokas. The sadhu and his followers met senior party leader Vijendra Singh Sisodia and demanded the assembly ticket from Sagar constituency on the basis of his caste.

A Brahmin candidate should be fielded from his area instead of a Jain contender, the self-styled godman told Sisodia and media persons.

When the party functionaries did not allow the sadhu and his followers to meet senior party leaders including Suhas Bhagat, the state general secretary, they walked out, but only after threatening the party would face the electoral consequences of not meeting his demands.

According to a senior party leader, babas aspiring for the party’s ticket is a new phenomenon.

Computer Baba was one of the five saints elevated to Mnister of State rank. Credit: PTI

Elevation of five babas to Minister of State rank

“Elevation of five babas to the Minister of State rank by chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan may have spurred political ambitions among self-styled godmen,” the senior party leader added.

The Madhya Pradesh BJP is facing trouble from another godman, Swami Namdev Tyagi, popularly known as Computer Baba.

Three-weeks after resigning from the minister of state (MoS) status given by the government, Computer Baba is organising a gathering of saints and seers to “expose” the BJP’s 15-year regime (Chouhan has been in office for nearly 13 years).

“Saints will hold discussions and deliver discourses highlighting illegal sand mining (in the Narmada River), steps required for the protection and welfare of cows, status and conditions of Hindu religious places in the state. The first event will be organised in Gwalior on October 30, Khandwa on November 4, Rewa on November 11, and
in Jabalpur on November 23,” Computer Baba said.

Ahead of Computer Baba’s programme, the chief minister attended an unscheduled meeting at Bhopal’s Hindi Bhawan, despite the model code of conduct being put in place. The meeting was called Sant Sabha.

Also Read: Why Congress Should Tie up With JAYS, the Adivasi Movement in MP That Began on Facebook

Chouhan attended the meet and sought the blessings of saints. The saints praised the CM for his decisions to establish a cow ministry, increase honorarium of pujaris, free pilgrimage scheme and other welfare measures taken by his government for the priests.

Some of the priests took the occasion to lay a scathing attack on the 52-year-old Computer Baba, who was among the five religious functionaries who were accorded Minister of State status in April this year by Chouhan’s government.

“One computer has failed, but there are 99 others functioning efficiently,” quipped Indore’s Swami Pranavanand Saraswati.

With 90% Hindu voters, elections in MP have always been a contest between the BJP and the Congress. The election for the 230 assembly seats will be held on November 28. Counting of votes will be done on December 11.

India Jumps 23 Places on World Bank’s ‘Ease of Doing Business’ Rankings

While the country has seen improvements on grant of construction permits and trade across borders, the usual caveats apply on what the rankings mean and how the World Bank’s changing methodology may have affected them.

New Delhi: India has jumped 23 places to the 77th position in the World Bank’s ‘ease of doing business’ ranking released Wednesday, in a development that comes as a shot-in-the-arm for the Narendra Modi government ahead of the 2019 general elections. 

India was ranked 100th in World Bank’s Doing Business Report last year, moving up from 131th position that it recorded in 2016.

However, as The Wire and US-based think-tank Centre for Global Development (CDG) noted at the time, much of India’s rise in 2017 came as a result of methodological changes carried out by the World Bank. It’s unclear at the moment whether these changes were ironed out for the 2018 version released on Wednesday.

The new rankings this time around will come as a boost for the Centre, which faces strong dissenting voices from opposition parties ahead of the general elections next year.

In the ‘Doing Business’ 2019 report, the World Bank has said India improved on six of the 10 parameters relating to starting and doing business in a country.

These parameters include ease of starting a business, construction permits, getting electricity, getting credit, paying taxes, trade across borders, enforcing contracts and resolving insolvency.India was ranked at the 142nd position among 190 nations when the Modi government came to power in 2014. It rose to 100th spot in the last ranking from the 131st rank in the previous year.

Also read: Big Business Strikes Again, this Time Through Modi Government’s Assault on RBI

New Zealand topped the list of 190 countries in ease of doing business, followed by Singapore, Denmark, and Hong Kong.

The United States is placed eight and China has been ranked 46th. Neighbour Pakistan is placed at 136. World Bank put India among the top 10 economies to make the most improvements.

EoDB flaws

Other criticisms of the World Bank’s rankings are well known: they do little to provide a comprehensive picture of the investment climate, it doesn’t talk about prospects of growth and that its sources of data collection are primarily limited to two cities (Mumbai and Delhi).

In 2017, a more granular-level study and analysis by the Niti Aayog and the IDFC Institute showed that the World Bank’s assessment also fell short in certain areas, such as the time it takes to start a business. Shortly after the study was released, the Modi government distanced itself from the report, saying it did not represent “official views”.

“What firms actually encounter ‘on the ground’ is perhaps more important, but there are limitations to our ability to measure and interpret those experiences without bias. The Doing Business reports’ de jure indicators offer a snapshot of a country’s regulatory cholesterol, but likewise should not be viewed in isolation,” policy researchers Matthew Lillehaugen and Milan Vaishnav wrote in 2017 on the rankings.

(With inputs from PTI)

Growth of Key Infra Sectors Dips to 4.3% in September, Lowest in Four Months

Previously, the lowest growth rate was in May 2018 when the core sectors expanded at 4.1%.

New Delhi: Growth of eight infrastructure sectors slowed down to 4.3% in September, the lowest in the last four months, as production of crude oil and natural gas declined. Previously, the lowest growth rate was in May 2018 when the core sectors expanded at 4.1%.

Eight infrastructure sectors of coal, crude oil, natural gas, refinery products, fertilisers, steel, cement and electricity had grown by 4.7% in September 2017.

The output of crude oil and natural gas dipped by 4.2% and 1.8%, respectively in the month under review, according to data released by the commerce and industry ministry on Wednesday.

Fertiliser, cement and electricity output grew by 2.5%, 11.8%, and 8.2%, respectively.

However, the growth of coal, refinery products, and steel sectors declined to 6.4%, 2.5% and 3.2%, respectively, in September.

During April-September 2018, the core sector growth was 5.5%, against 3.2% in the year-ago period.

These eight segments comprise 40.27% of the weight of items included in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP).

(PTI)

Custodial Interrogation of Chidambaram Necessary, Says Enforcement Directorate

The ED opposed his anticipatory bail saying that it seemed from the conduct of Chidambaram, who is a “highly influential and well connected individual”, there was a serious apprehension of his influencing the witnesses and tampering with evidence pertaining in the case.

New Delhi: The Enforcement Directorate on Wednesday told a Delhi court that custodial interrogation of former Union minister and Congress leader P. Chidambaram was necessary in the Aircel-Maxis money laundering case to unravel the truth as he was evasive and non-cooperative in the probe.

The ED opposed his anticipatory bail saying that it seemed from the conduct of Chidambaram, who is a “highly influential and well connected individual”, there was a serious apprehension of his influencing the witnesses and tampering with evidence pertaining in the case.

The agency sought custodial interrogation of Chidambaram on the grounds that he has not been cooperating with it in the probe and has hence been making it difficult to complete the investigation in a time bound manner as directed by the Supreme Court.

The agency, which filed its response to the anticipatory bail plea of Chidambaram, said that he has remained evasive. Consequently, grant of pre-arrest bail at this stage would be highly detrimental to the investigation.

“From the conduct of the petitioner, which gets amply demonstrated from the records available, the investigating agency has reached a bonafide conclusion that in the absence of custodial interrogation it will not be possible to reach the truth of the allegations as the petitioner has chosen to be evasive and non-cooperative,” the agency said.

It added that Chidambaram, being a senior advocate practising in the Supreme Court, a Rajya Sabha MP and former union minister, “is a highly influential and well connected individual. Therefore, there is a serious apprehension of the applicant influencing witnesses or tampering with evidence pertaining to the present case.”

The agency said that the investigation pertaining to FIPB approval fraudulently granted by Chidambaram has several dimensions having wide ramifications. The investigation, it added, has been concluded to some extent and with regard to certain issues was still going on.

The hearing on Chidambaram’s plea will take place before Special Judge O.P. Saini on Thursday.

On October 8, the court extended the interim protection from arrest granted to Chidambaram and his son Karti till November 1 in the Aircel-Maxis case filed by the CBI and the ED.

Chidambaram had filed the plea for protection from arrest in the ED case on May 30 this year after which he got relief from the court on various occasions.

On October 25, the agency filed a charge sheet against Chidambaram in the Aircel-Maxis money laundering case, accusing him of conspiring with foreign investors to clear their venture.

The others named in the charge sheet filed are: V Srinivasan (former CEO of Aircel), Augustus Ralph Marshall (associated with Maxis), Astro All Asia Networks Plc Malaysia, Aircel Televentures Ltd, Maxis Mobile Services Sdn Bhd, Bumi Armada Berhad, Bumi Armada Navigation Sdn Bhd.

The nine are accused of money laundering of Rs 1.16 crore with illegal approval given by the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) through the former minister in March 2006. The approval was given to the foreign investor Global Communication and Services Holdings Limited, Mauritius in violation of the various rules and regulations governing the FDI policy in India.

Filing the second supplementary charge sheet, the ED said: “As per rules and FDI policy of Government of India in 2006, Chidambaram, the then Finance Minister was empowered to give approval of the foreign investment to the proposals involving foreign investment up to Rs 600 crore only.”

The foreign investment proposal of Global Communication and Services Holdings Limited was of USD 800 million which amounted to Rs 3,560 crore approximately (when 1 USD was Rs 44.5), it had said.

“The foreign investment proposal of Global Communication and Services Holdings Limited should have been referred to Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) but it was not done and approved by Chidambaram under a conspiracy,” ED said.

ED had filed the first charge sheet in the case against Karti; later, a supplementary charge sheet was also filed against him.

The first charge sheet in the case was filed against Karti on June 13 which claimed that he controlled two firms which allegedly received Rs 1.16 crore as bribe money in the Aircel-Maxis money laundering case.

The ED had registered the case under the sections of Prevention of Money Laundering Act on February 7, 2012 on the basis of an FIR registered by the CBI.

The agency mentioned that the former Union minister’s son has been linked with various individuals and companies involved in the FIPB approval given to the Aircel-Maxis deal.

The senior Congress leader’s role has come under the scanner of investigating agencies in the Rs 3,500-crore Aircel-Maxis deal and the INX Media case involving Rs 305 crore.

In its charge sheet filed earlier in the case against former telecom minister Dayanidhi Maran, his brother Kalanithi Maran and others, the agency alleged that Chidambaram had granted an FIPB approval in March, 2006 to Mauritius-based Global Communication Services Holdings Ltd, a subsidiary of Maxis.

The Maran brothers and the other accused named in the CBI charge sheet were discharged by the special court, which had said the agency had failed to produce any material against them to proceed with the trial.

The ED is also probing a separate money-laundering case in the Aircel-Maxis matter, FOR which Chidambaram and Karti have been questioned.

(PTI)

India Convinced Bangladesh to Drop Objections to Myanmar’s IORA Membership

IORA will adopt a document on the role of dialogue partners. With China in mind, India had argued that dialogue partners should not lead the direction of group.

New Delhi: A recent series of backroom moves by India helped defuse a diplomatic tussle between Myanmar and Bangladesh over the former’s entry into the influential Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA), according to people with knowledge of the matter.

The association is the only multilateral platform for littoral states along the Indian Ocean, but it has remained inconspicuous for the first 15 years of its existence.

With the geopolitical spotlight on the Indian Ocean and the rising cache of the ‘Indo-Pacific’, IORA has attracted much more active interest not only from its key members, but also from external players who have the status of dialogue partners. New Delhi had to expend considerable diplomatic capital so that dialogue partners, like China, did not “dominate” the direction of this group.

When the ministers of the member countries meet this week in South Africa for the 18th edition of their annual meeting, they are expected to welcome Myanmar into their fold as the 22nd member. India will be represented by the minister of state for external affairs V.K. Singh.

However, the inclusion of Myanmar has not been an easy task.

The Wire has learnt that Bangladesh, along with Somalia, had serious objections to the entry of Myanmar ahead of the meeting of IORA committee of senior officials on July 30-31. “Their opposition was due to Myanmar’s treatment of Rohingyas,” said a diplomatic source.

Also read: Sri Lankan Crisis Cannot Be Seen Through India-China Prism: Former Indian Envoy

In July this year, there had been rising frustration in Bangladesh over the delay in starting the repatriation of Rohingya refugees by the Myanmar government. The one-year anniversary of the exodus of 700,000 refugees into Cox’s Bazaar was also looming.

Multiple sources confirmed India was key in expending diplomatic elbow grease to persuade Bangladesh to drop its objections. “The argument used was they cannot let the state of their bilateral relations affect their behaviour at a multilateral forum,” a senior government official told The Wire.

Diplomatic sources in Dhaka also confirmed that Bangladesh was swayed to drop its protest against Myanmar’s membership by India. “You cannot win everything,” said a senior Bangladeshi diplomat, when asked about Dhaka’s response.

Most of these diplomatic discussions were taking place behind the scenes even before the IORA committee of senior officials held their meeting.

When Myanmar’s membership was taken up formally in July, there were only statements of support from Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand for their fellow ASEAN colleague.

Along with Myanmar’s entry, Bangladesh would also be confirmed this week as the vice-chair of IORA for the term 2019-2021.

There was another country whose membership application was also considered, but it got a very different reception at the committee of senior officials in July.

Maldives, the Indian ocean archipelagic nation of 1,200 islands, had applied to join IORA in May 2017.

But when Maldives’ request was discussed, the Mauritian representative wondered whether Malé was serious at all. “They wondered if Maldives, which had not contacted even one member to ask for support, was interested in the membership at all,” said a diplomatic source.

Also read: Bangladesh: Concerns Over Free Speech Continue With Opposition-Linked Lawyer’s Arrest

Despite being neighbours, there has been a bit of friction between the Maldives and Mauritius, especially after the former voted ‘no’ in the United Nations General Assembly on the resolution asking the International Court of Justice to give its opinion on the question of sovereignty of the Chagos archipelago.

In the end, India suggested that Maldives’ membership application could be deferred, which was accepted.

Maldives’ application is also listed on the agenda of session four of the Council of Ministers on November 2. It remains to be seen if there is renewed interest in allowing Malé into the club, especially since there is now a change in leadership after the presidential elections.

Meanwhile, France’s efforts to get membership continues to be thwarted by their former colonies of Madagascar and Comoros, with the three having unresolved sovereignty claims over Scattered Islands in the Indian Ocean.

During the last visit of French President Emmanuel Macron to New Delhi, India had welcomed “prospect of France’s enhanced participation at the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA)”.

This is finally likely to happen when the IORA Council of Ministers adopts the draft Declaration on Enhancing Dialogue Partners Engagement on November 2.

The text was finalised in July, after some rounds of negotiations between countries having their own view about how much space should be given to dialogue partners – China, France, US, UK, Germany, Egypt and Japan.

Their assessment was largely coloured by their perception of the spreading influence of China – one of the seven dialogue partners – in the Indian Ocean region.

South Africa, the current chair, has been interested in getting more involvement from various dialogue partners, including China with which it has a close relationship.

In the run-up to the meeting, the South African foreign office’s deputy Director General for Asia and Africa, Anil Sooklal, claimed that a “legacy” of South Africa’s chairmanship would be this document that “articulates the relationship between dialogue partners and member states”.

“We need to ensure that we balance the anxieties of some member states that we don’t want to be swamped, while also giving a meaningful role to dialogue partners. The document that we have all agreed at the senior officials level has this balance,” said Sooklal.

India, as per sources, led the group of countries in IORA who were concerned that dialogue partners can help, but only in a limited way.

One dialogue partner had proposed posting of personnel at the IORA secretariat based in Mauritius. This was expectedly frowned upon by the India-led bloc.

While dialogue partners could help in capacity building and funding support, it was asserted that they should not dictate how their money should be spent. “We don’t want dialogue partners to dominate the direction of the organisation,” said the senior government official.

Sooklal emphasised that the dialogue partners, who have made “significant contribution” to IORA special fund like China, United States and Germany, have determined their special focus area “in consultations with us”.

The US have shown special interest in programmes related to women’s empowerment and small-scale enterprises, while China is keen on ‘blue economy’.

IORA member states are also expected to approve Turkey and South Korea as the two new dialogue partners.

While IORA was largely seen as a group focused on development issues, maritime safety and security was added as one of the six priority areas at the 2011 ministerial meeting in India.

India was perceived to be keen in navigating IORA through the realm of maritime security, albeit via the Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) route so as to calm any concerns of securitisation of the grouping.

Therefore, it was a bit of a surprise for other member states when Sri Lanka volunteered to be the lead coordinator for the permanent working group on maritime security at the July senior officials meeting.

The terms of reference for this IORA working group was finalised at an initial workshop in Colombo in September. It includes establishing a common understanding and integrated policy approach on risks, threats and opportunities, capacity building and enhancing maritime domain awareness.

Sri Lanka has shown interest in becoming a more active player in Indian Ocean, especially after Ranil Wickremesinghe became prime minister.

Last year, Wickremesinghe, as well as, members of the government, had enthusiastically lobbied for a drawing up a code of conduct to ensure freedom of navigation in the Indian Ocean, claiming that UNCLOS was outdated. This was reiterated at several public platforms throughout 2017.

But just like Sri Lanka’s historical support for an Indian Ocean Nuclear Weapons Free Zone was stymied by New Delhi, India’s strong feedback to Colombo in April 2018 that a code of conduct was unhelpful, has also apparently led to its disappearance from Lankan diplomatic priorities. In a 2018 July speech, Wickremesinghe said, “There is no need for a new code of conduct”.

Hashimpura Conviction: Clinching Evidence was Diary With Names of Policemen on Riot Duty

Successive governments had withheld this diary – leading to an acquittal from a lower court in 2015 – but on the Delhi high court’s direction, the original was brought on record.

New Delhi: A general diary, which had the names of all the 19 persons who had gone out on a truck for riot duty, ahead of the Hashimpura massacre in 1987, in which at least 40 Muslims were killed, has proved to be the clinching piece of evidence which led to the Delhi high court overturning the sessions court order and ordering the conviction of 16 Provincial Armed Constabulary (PAC) personnel of Uttar Pradesh from the crime. Three of the accused had died during the course of the trial. Incidentally, successive state governments had, in order to shield the personnel, withheld this crucial piece of evidence from the courts.

The trial court had acknowledged that victims were abducted by PAC men

Talking to The Wire, senior advocate Vrinda Grover who had fought the case for the Hashimpura victims from 2002 to 2004 and thereafter represented the National Human Rights Commission in the Delhi high court, said: “In this case, the NHRC had intervened and it had asked for various documents. It was all along our case that the state was shielding the PAC, so many of the crucial documents, which are incriminating, have not been placed before the court. The trial court had acquitted them on the ground that there is nothing to say that these particular PAC people had killed the victims.”

In March 2015, the sessions court had stated that it had been “duly proved and established” that “about 40-45” persons belonging to Mohalla Hashimpura were “abducted in a yellow colour PAC truck” belonging to the 41st battalion of PAC. It had also noted that PAC officials were involved in the abduction and they had subsequently “shot at and thrown” into waters of Gang Nahar, Murad Nagar and Hindon river, Ghaziabad. However, the court had held that “it has not been proved beyond reasonable doubts” that the accused are the PAC officials who had carried out the abductions and killings.

General diary named the PAC men who had gone in the truck

Grover said the most crucial piece of evidence was the general diary. “There was one particular document, which was a general diary in the case – which recorded the movement of personnel going in and out of a police station – and this daily diary entry the state had suppressed in the case.”

Stating that there was clearly complicity between the state and the accused, Grover said, “through its application before the high court, the NHRC had started asking for various documents and finally through the orders of the court the CB-CID, which was the investigating agency of Uttar Pradesh, was forced to place before the court the original general diary documents which named the 19 PAC policemen who had got into the truck and gone on riot duty.”

Also read: Hashimpura: Justice Denied 30 Years and Counting

Once diary surfaced, fresh evidence was recorded in trial court, formed basis of conviction in HC

“Once the original document surfaced,” she said “fresh evidence was recorded in the trial court. The High Court directed that this evidence now be placed on record. Again the evidence was recorded in the trial court. It was then placed on record, brought back before the high court and on the basis of that it convicted them.”

A bench of Justices S. Muralidhar and I.S. Mehta had on February 20 this year stated: “The court has perused the trial court record and it has seen that the document… filed by the State of Uttar Pradesh forms part of trial court record. The said document is at page 5,743 of the trial court record. For reasons that are not clear that document has not been exhibited in the trial court and not adverted to by any of the prosecution witnesses or even by the sole defence witness examined.”

The lawyer, who has been associated with this case for nearly 17 years now, said “it is a case where for so many years the perpetrators were shielded and protected by the state, repeatedly and regardless of which political party came to power in Uttar Pradesh. They were all shielding the PAC accused.”

However, she said, with the help of this diary, the court was able to establish the precise names involved in the crime. Noting that out of the 19 original accused, three had died and 16 have been convicted, she said the prosecution had also made use of the log of the truck to secure a conviction. “We had the number of the truck in which the PAC staff had left but the part of the puzzle which was not available in the evidence was who was in the truck. For conviction we needed the exact names. That particular general diary entry came out after the trial court order and during the course of the proceeding in the high court.”

State submitted diary on directions of high court

Till the time of the trial court judgment, the state had not shown the original general diary. It was only on the directions of the high court that the state was compelled to place the original diary on record, she added.

Following the High Court’s directions, in March this year this diary was submitted before the trial court by a 78-year-old witness Ranbir Singh Bishnoi. Deposing before an additional sessions judge, he had submitted: “At the time of filing chargesheet, I had examined all the documents and filed them along with the charge sheet. Photocopies of GD dated May 22, 1987, running into six pages of C Post Police Line, Meerut were filed along with the charge sheet. The originals of the same are now submitted before the court and exhibited.”

Reading out from the documents, he had also asserted that “it is incorrect to suggest that the documents are not original documents.”

What the general diary revealed

“According to the GD No.6, on May 22, 1987, at 7:50 am, police force was sent to Outpost Pilokhadi, P.S. Lisadi Gate, Meerut, UP. PC (platoon commander) Surender Pal Singh… went to outpost Pilokhadi. At that time they were having 17 rifles, 850 rounds, one revolver with 30 rounds and they had gone there in the truck bearing registration No. URU-1493 and the driver of said truck was Ct (constable) Mokham Singh,” Bishnoi had stated while giving the details.

He had also noted their return to the police line a little over an hour later saying: “As per the GD No.15… at about 9:00 pm, the aforesaid PAC team came back to police line Meerut from OP Pilokhadi. As per the record… the aforesaid officials were not assigned any other duty on May 22, 1987, after they came back from O.P. Pilokhadi to police line… It is incorrect to suggest that I have produced a made up record.”

This more or less corroborates the survivor accounts. One of the survivors, Zulfiqar Nasir, had spoken about how the killings had taken place on the truck and near the canal at around 9 pm.

Apartheid, Guns and Money: Book Lifts the Lid on Cold War Secrets

As South Africa became an international pariah, it began working in shady ways through even more shady operators, including getting arms from the Soviet Union and China.

It’s not very often that a book really reshapes our perception of an issue, but Hennie van Vuuren’s Apartheid, Guns and Money: A Tale of Profit is one. It is a massive work: over 600 pages and the result of a decade of meticulous, painstaking work.

From a modest office in a rundown suburb of Cape Town, Van Vuuren has been beavering away to probe into the stories that could never be told during the apartheid years. Formerly director at the Institute for Security Studies, he now runs Open Secrets, which peers into economic and human rights violations. This volume, first published in South African in 2017, is the result.

The extraordinary tale that Van Vuuren tells is how – as the South African state gradually became an international pariah and as the truth about apartheid became internationally known – it moved from a normal member of the world community to a covert operator. It began working in shady ways, through even more shady operators.

To ensure that it had access to arms and oil, Pretoria moved from legitimate to illegitimate trade; from overt to covert deals and from legal to illegal transactions. This was supported (or at least connived at) by many western powers. That the US, Britain and France did this has been known, or at least suspected, for many years. Van Vuuren fills in the blanks and gives us plenty of new information on this. Although shocking this is less than astonishing.

Apartheid Guns and Money: A Tale of Profit
Hennie Van Vuuren
Jacana Media (May 2017)

What is really novel is that he uncovers a completely new set of actors: the Chinese and the Soviet Union. In the past it has been assumed that, for the most part, they were completely wedded to the liberation movements. The support from Moscow and Beijing for the African National Congress and – to a lesser extent – the Pan Africanist Congress, was so widely reported that few suspected there might be less than total solidarity between the communist powers and the liberation movements.

Yes, there were the odd stories about the South African diamond giant – De Beers – being spotted at the ballet in Moscow doing deals with Russian diamond companies, but this was seen as a small aberration. After all, both countries wanted to keep up the prices of diamonds on international markets, so some kind of arrangement was perhaps inevitable.

But – if Van Vuuren is right – these relationships went far, far beyond the odd contact.

Mind-boggling complexity

Take one example: the voyage of the Pia Vesta, now a rusting hulk, lying off the coast of Venezuela. This vessel was, says Van Vuuren, “once at the centre of one of the greatest arms heists of the 1980s involving socialist East Germany, South Africa, Peru, Panama, probably the CIA and a crafty French arms dealer by the name of Georges Starckmann.”

The tale begins with a top secret minute of a meeting between the head of the South African Defence Force, Jannie Geldenhuys, and his senior officials in connection with operation “Daisy”. This was an attempt to recover $20 million that Starckmann had allegedly swindled out of the South Africans.

The story is of mind-boggling complexity, but involves Starckmann doing a deal with an East German firm called IMES, run by the East German deputy foreign minister with Stasi employees – members of the East German secret service. The result was an arrangement which involved 60 shipments of weapons to South Africa via a Danish shipping company. The shipments were to be trailed half way around the world to disguise their final destination.

These shipments were for vital military equipment, including 1,400 anti-tank missiles. The weapons, which had Peruvian end-user certificates, ended up off the coast of Panama where the ruler, General Noriega, had apparently given the green light for the operation. In the end the dictator reneged on the deal. When the Pia Vesta arrived in Panama on 14 June 1986 its crew was arrested and the vessel impounded. In 1989 General Noriega was ousted by the Americans.

How the ship ended up sunk off Venezuela is a bit of a mystery, but then, as Van Vuuren points out, so is much of this story. He concludes that South Africa’s state arms dealer, Armscor, was involved. “But for all the smoke and mirrors, one thing is as clear as day. There is more than sufficient evidence that Armscor bought arms from IMES, a Stasi-run East German company operating behind the Iron Curtain. During the Cold War, much was not as it seemed”, he said.

Nor was this an isolated incident. Van Vuuren says he has evidence that Armscor had a team of military experts working inside the Soviet Union with an office in Leningrad. So close was the relationship that when the Chernobyl nuclear reactor disaster took place in 1986, the Russians turned to South Africa for medical support.

The relationship with China

The relationship that the book portrays between South Africa and the Chinese is just as complex. It involves purchases of Chinese military equipment – everything from machine guns to missiles and rocket launchers – using Congolese companies as a front. Sometimes the shipments were destined for South Africa’s Angolan allies, UNITA, sometimes not.

Overall the book is a compelling and convincing narrative: our understanding of apartheid’s global supporters has been transformed.The Conversation

Martin Plaut, Senior Research Fellow, Horn of Africa and Southern Africa, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, School of Advanced Study.

This article was originally published on The Conversation . Read the original article.

With Its Big Little Lies on Rafale, the Modi Govt is Treading a Treacherous Path

The decision announced in Paris on April 10, 2015 by a government that promised to “eradicate all corruption” violated every safeguard of the Defence Procurement Procedure 2013.

During his tour to Bengal in 1925, Mahatma Gandhi visited Nawabganj. Addressing a group of school children, he remarked, “You all spin and wear khaddar but tell me how many of you always speak the truth and never lie?”

A few boys raised their hands. “Well, now tell me how many of you occasionally happen to lie.” Two boys raised their hands first, then four and finally almost all. “Thank you”, said Gandhiji, bidding good bye. “There will always be hope for those of you who know and own up that they occasionally lie. The path of those who think they never lie is difficult. I wish both success.”

It’s clear that persistent denials on the Rafale deal by the Narendra Modi government can only result in making its path more difficult.

The Defence Procurement Procedure 2013 declares in its Foreword:

“Defence Acquisition is a complex decision making process that needs to balance the competing requirements of expeditious procurement, development of an indigenous defence sector and conformity to the highest standards of transparency, probity and public accountability.”

The expeditious procurement of 36 Rafale aircrafts cannot be at the cost of the standards of transparency, probity and public accountability.

In its 2014 manifesto, BJP had declared, “Corruption is a manifestation of poor governance. Moreover, it reflects the bad intentions of those sitting in power. All pervasive corruption under the Congress-led UPA has become a national crisis.”

The party promised to establish a system “which eliminates the scope for corruption” through “public awareness, technology enabled e-governance, system based policy driven governance” etc. amongst others. It promised a transition “from representative to participatory democracy” and promised “openness in the government”.

Yet, the government’s decision to acquire 36 Rafale jets remains shrouded in deep secrecy and mystery.

Also read: Can Narendra Modi Be Convicted of Corruption for the Renegotiated Rafale Deal?

India began the process to buy a fleet of 126 Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) in 2007. The contenders in the bidding process for this mega deal were Lockheed Martin’s F-16s, Eurofighter Typhoon, Russia’s MiG-35, Sweden’s Gripen, Boeing’s F/A-18s and Dassault Aviation’s Rafale. Bids were opened in December 2012 and Dassault emerged as L1. Its original proposal offered 18 planes to be manufactured in France and 108 in India in collaboration with Hindustan Aeronautics Limited.

However, even after lengthy negotiations on price and transfer of technology, the deal could not go through till May 2014. 

On April 11, 2015, Le Figaro, a newspaper owned by the Dassault group, reported:

During his official visit to Paris, the Prime Minister Modi asked François Hollande to supply “ready to fly” combat aircraft that will be produced in France.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to Paris has spurred a last-minute acceleration and change in direction with respect to the sale of Rafale aircraft to India. It was at the Élysée, alongside François Hollande, that the head of the Indian government announced on Friday night, his intention to acquire 36 Rafale jets. “I asked the president (François Hollande) to supply 36 “ ready to fly” Rafale jets to India,” he said soberly, speaking in Hindi.

The surprise of the day: it was not the contract for the purchase of 126 aircraft, 108 of which are expected to be assembled in India, and being negotiated for three years, that was concluded. New Delhi has made use of a clause of this contract to order aircraft that will be built in France, in Merignac, Gironde.

But the implementation of the “contract of the century” involving the assembly of 108 aircraft under the leadership of the Indian public manufacturing company, HAL (Hindustan Aeronautics Limited) proved to be much more complex than expected. The first difficulty that has prolonged the negotiations in recent months: the Indians wanted the French aircraft manufacturer to vouch for the aircraft assembled in India, with Indian components. For Dassault Aviation, it was inconceivable to bear the entire industrial responsibility for a jet when it could not control the entire production line. There was, however, common ground reached on this point.

The choice to finally order aircraft made in France is a departure from the industrial policy of Narendra Modi. Since the fall, the Indian Prime Minister launched a communication campaign around the “Make in India” The assembly of a hundred Rafales in Bangalore was one of the flagship programs. But the negotiation of the initial contract, covering the 126 aircraft, will continue, assures the Ministry of Defence. (translated from the French original)

On the same day, Le Monde reported:

 

The Indian Prime Minister visiting the Elysee announced, on Friday, the purchase of 36 fighter aircraft manufactured by Dassault in France. After Egypt, another unexpected agreement? Negotiations between the French and Indian governments were completed on Friday, April 10th, for the purchase of 36 Rafale jets.

The issue of the Rafale jets is still under discussion and we should be able to move forward on mutually acceptable terms,” said Modi to the Figaro, a newspaper owned by the Dassault group, which published this on Thursday, April 9th, just before his arrival in Paris. (translated from the French original)

Also read: Jaitley’s ’15 Questions’ Only Reinforce the Murky Nature of Modi’s Rafale Deal

It also reported something which so far has not been discussed in the Indian press:

This agreement, if it were to materialise, would remove some of the uncertainties related to the financing of the 2014-2019 Military Planning Law (MPL). For several years, the French State committed it would guarantee the production rate of Rafale jets, with a minimum of eleven aircraft per year, so as to not impact negatively, the Dassault assembly chain and its 500 subcontractors. However, the new MPL has only awarded 26 Rafale jets for the French army, and this guarantees production only until the end of 2016. The State has planned at that time to stop its purchases of Dassault aircraft so as to be able to allocate this budget to other priority equipment.

During the MPL, Dassault must produce 66 Rafale jets, at the rate of eleven aircraft per year. Apart from the production meant for France, the other 40 must be bought by foreign countries, failing which Paris must acquire them. With the 24 jets ordered by Egypt and those that will be ordered by India, the goal relating to the production of jets for foreign countries will be attained. (translated from the French original)

Prime Minister Modi had decided to scrap the tender process of 2007 and substitute it with an agreement between him and the French president, which was now being touted as an inter government agreement.

The 2013 policy expressly provides that such agreements may be necessitated due to “geo-strategic advantages that are likely to accrue to our country” and can only be done after clearance from a competent financial authority (CFA). The policy expressly specifies the cases covered under this provision,

“(a) There are occasions when equipment of proven technology and capabilities belonging to a friendly foreign country is identified by our Armed Forces while participating in joint international exercises. Such equipment can be procured from that country which may provide the same, ex their stocks or by using Standard Contracting Procedure as existing in that country.

(b) There may be cases where a very large value weapon system / platform, which was in service in a friendly foreign country, is available for transfer or sale. Such procurements would normally be at a much lesser cost than the cost of the original platform/ weapon system mainly due to its present condition.

(c) In certain cases, there may be a requirement of procuring a specific state-of-the art equipment/ platform, however, the Government of the OEM’s country might have imposed restriction on its sale and thus the equipment cannot be evaluated on ‘No Cost No Commitment’ basis. Such equipment may be obtained on lease for a specific period by signing an Inter-Governmental Agreement before a decision is taken for its purchase.”

The policy mandates that in cases of large value acquisitions, especially those requiring product support over a long period of time, it may be advisable to enter into a separate Inter Government Agreement” but, “such an Inter Governmental Agreement is expected to safeguard the interests of the Government of India and should also provide for assistance of the foreign government in case the contract(s) runs into an unforeseen problem”.

Clearly the decision announced on April 10, 2015, in Paris violated every safeguard of the said policy. None of the eventualities contemplated for acquisition under an IGA are applicable and certainly the interests of the Government of India have not been safeguarded nor is there any guarantee from the Government of France undertaking to provide assistance for unforeseen problems in future.

Rafale jet fighters on the assembly line in Dassault Aviation’s factory in Merignac, France. Credit: Reuters

It is unclear if the cabinet or its committee on defence or for that matter the CFA have taken any prior decisions with regards to such a deal. Procedures followed by the government subsequent to Modi’s announcement make a mockery of the safeguards and the established procedures and promised transparency and would be completely unconstitutional and illegal. France has clearly palmed off to India its obligation to buy the aircraft manufactured by Dassault and remaining unsold as mentioned by Le Monde. The ‘Make in India’ plan and transfer of technology are compromised.

Also read: ‘The Rafale Transaction Is a Case of Criminal Misconduct’

Price is another issue on which Modi’s government has compromised very seriously. Equally, the involvement of Reliance Aerostructure Limited (now Dassault-Reliance Aerospace Limited) as the offset partner is whimsical, arbitrary and completely dangerous for the security of the nation. This company was incorporated on April 24, 2015, days after Modi’s announcement, with a paid up capital of just Rs 5 lakh and was rechristened on February 10, 2017. The 2013 policy states,

“The offset clause would be applicable for all procurement proposals where indicative cost is 300 Crore or more and the schemes are categorised as ‘Buy (Global)’ involving outright purchase from foreign / Indian vendors and ‘Buy and Make with Transfer of Technology’ i.e Purchase from foreign vendor followed by Licensed Production…”

Appendix D gives detailed guidelines with the following objective: 

“The key objective of the Defence Offset Policy is to leverage capital acquisitions to develop Indian defence industry by (i) fostering development of internationally competitive enterprises, (ii) augmenting capacity for Research, Design and Development related to defence products and services and (iii) encouraging development of synergistic sectors like civil aerospace, and internal security”

Paragraph 4 of the guidelines expressly defines an Indian Offset Partner as under:

“4.1 Indian enterprises and institutions and establishments engaged in manufacture of eligible products and/or provision of eligible services, including DRDO, are referred to as the Indian Offset Partner (IOP).

4.2 The Indian offset partner shall, besides any other regulations in force, also comply with the guidelines/licensing requirements stipulated by the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion as applicable”.

Paragraph 6 deals with management of offsets and provides as under:

“6.1 The Acquisition Wing in the Department of Defence will be responsible for (i) technical and commercial evaluation of offset proposals received in response to RFPs and (ii) conclusion of offset contracts.”

Paragraph 7 deals with submission of offset proposals and directs inter-alia as under:

“7.1 Para 26 of Chapter I read with Schedule I of DPP 2013 prescribes the standard RFP document. Para 6 of the RFP format will apply when offsets are attracted. At the stage of submission of the techno-commercial proposal, the vendor will submit a written undertaking in the format at Annexure I to Appendix-D to the effect that he will meet the offset obligations laid down in the RFP as per the Defence Offset Guidelines…

The technical and commercial offset proposals should be submitted in two separate sealed covers to the Technical Manager of Acquisition Wing.”

Paragraph 8 deals with processing of offset proposals and mandates:

“8.1 The Technical Offset Evaluation Committee (TOEC) will be constituted by the Technical Manager with approval of the Director General (Acquisition). The TOEC will include representatives of the Service Headquarters, Defence Finance, DRDO and DOMW. The Committee may also include experts, as may be deemed necessary, with approval of the Director General (Acquisition).”

“8.6 All Offset proposals will be processed by the Acquisition Manager and approved by Raksha Mantri, regardless of their value. Offset proposals will also be incorporated in the note seeking approval of Competent Financial Authority (CFA) for the main procurement proposal for information of the CFA. The offset contract will be signed by the Acquisition Manager after the main procurement proposal has been approved by the Competent financial Authority. A signed copy of the offset contract will be made available to DOMW”

The guidelines provide detailed requirements, undertakings, obligations, reporting and penalties. By ostensibly allowing Dassault to choose the offset partner, the Modi government has given a complete go by to the guidelines and the safeguards contained therein. What it has done is to adopt a novel hybrid procedure of purported Inter Government Agreement with the vendor Dassault, selecting the Indian offset partner. The Defence Procurement Procedure of 2013 and its safeguards on transparency, probity and public accountability have been thrown out of the window.

The Supreme Court has time and again warned:

It must, therefore, be taken to be the law that where the Government is dealing with the public, whether by way of giving jobs or entering into contracts or issuing quotas or licences or granting other forms of largesse, the Government cannot act arbitrarily at its sweet will and, like a private individual, deal with any person it pleases, but its action must be in conformity with standard or norms which is not arbitrary, irrational or irrelevant.” The power or discretion of the Government in such matters has been held to be “confined and structured by rational, relevant and non-discriminatory standard or norm” and departure there from would necessarily be liable to be struck down. (Ramana Dayaram Shetty v. International Airport Authority of India, (1979) 3 SCC 489)

In Reliance Energy Ltd. v. Maharashtra State Road Development Corpn. Ltd, (2007), the Supreme Court went further and held:

“Article 14 of the constitution embodies the principle of non-discrimination. However, it is not a free-standing provision. It has to be read in conjunction with rights conferred by other articles like Article 21 of the Constitution. The said Article 21 refers to “right to life”. It includes opportunity… “Level playing field” is an important concept while construing Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution… This is because the said doctrine provides space within which equally placed competitors are allowed to bid so as to subserve the larger public interest. “Globalisation”, in essence, is liberalisation of trade. Today India has dismantled licence raj. The economic reforms introduced after 1992 have brought in the concept of “globalisation”. Decisions or acts which result in unequal and discriminatory treatment, would violate the doctrine of “level playing field” embodied in Article 19(1)(g).”

Interestingly, the petitioner therein was also a company from the Anil Ambani group.   

During his campaign for the 2014 election, Modi repeatedly promised to eradicate corruption. At a speech in the United States in September 2015, he rhetorically asked the audience on corruption, “Is the country not disappointed?”. The public replied, “yes”. He again asked, “Is there not anger against corruption”, “Yes”, people responded. He then asked, “I am standing before you. Tell me if there is any allegation against me”, “No”, people shouted.

Yet, Modi is singularly silent on the Rafale deal.

Also read: Indian Govt Suggested Reliance as Partner in Rafale Deal, Hollande Tells French Website

When François Hollande, the former French president with whom Modi announced the deal in April 2015, clarified that the choice of the Anil Ambani-led Reliance group as the offset partner was imposed, stating that, “We did not have a say. The government proposed this service group and Dassault negotiated with Ambani. We did not have a choice. We accepted the interlocutor that was given to us”, Modi’s party and ministers repeatedly attacked Hollande.

But for the same Hollande, Prime Minister Modi while riding the metro in New Delhi in January 2016 had categorically said, “President François Hollande is a very close friend of India” and that “we are very happy that we have formed an agreement for purchase of 36 Rafale aircraft with France”.

The Modi government ought to learn a lesson from Mahatma Gandhi’s profound remarks in 1925.

Dushyant Dave is a senior advocate and former president of the Supreme Court Bar Association.

#MeToo: M.J. Akbar Records Statement in Criminal Defamation Case Against Priya Ramani

Akbar has termed the allegations “false, fabricated and deeply distressing” and has said he is taking appropriate legal action against them.

New Delhi: Former Union minister M.J. Akbar, who has filed a criminal defamation case against journalist Priya Ramani, told a Delhi court on Wednesday that an “immediate damage” has been caused to him due to the “scurrilous”, concocted and false allegations of sexual misconduct levelled against him.

Akbar appeared before Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Samar Vishal and recorded his statement to support the defamation complaint filed by him against Ramani on October 15.

Ramani has accused Akbar of sexual misconduct that occurred around 20 years ago.

“Indeed there was an immediate damage because of the scurrilous nature of these concocted and false allegations. I was attacked in my personal capacity about alleged and fabricated non-events allegedly done two decades ago,” he said in his statement.

“I chose in that environment to seek justice in my personal capacity without the Appurtenance of Office. This is why I offered my registration as Minister of State, Govt of India. My reputation has been tarnished in the eyes of general public and those who are near and dear and known to me,” he said.

Akbar, who resigned from the Union Council of Ministers on October 17, has concluded the recording of his statement.

The court has fixed November 12 for further hearing of the case when the statements of witnesses named by Akbar will be recorded.

Akbar’s name cropped up on social media when he was in Nigeria, as the #MeToo campaign raged on in India. Multiple women have come out with accounts of alleged sexual harassment by him when he was a journalist.

Akbar has termed the allegations “false, fabricated and deeply distressing” and has said he is taking appropriate legal action against them.

Expressing her readiness to fight the defamation allegations, Ramani has said, “Rather than engage with the serious allegations that many women have made against him, he seeks to silence them through intimidation and harassment.”

Akbar’s plea listed alleged defamatory imputations made by Ramani on the social media and also referred to his “long and illustrious” career as a journalist while terming the allegations of Ramani a “figment of her imagination”.

It also calls the allegations made by Ramani”scandalous”, alleging that the “very tone and tenor” are “ex-facie defamatory”.

The plea said they have not only damaged his goodwill and reputation in his social circle but also affected Akbar’s reputation in “the community, friends, family and colleagues” and caused “irreparable loss” and “tremendous distress”.

Akbar claimed that the Ramani, while putting forward the allegations relating to incidents which allegedly occurred 20 years ago, “intentionally put forward malicious, fabricated, and salacious imputations to harm the reputation of the complainant”.

Section 500 of the IPC provides sentence for the offence of defamation and the accused may be awarded two-year jail term or fine or both in the event of conviction.