HomeNewsOpinionPolitics | Have the KSFE raids exposed the fissures within the CPI(M)?

Politics | Have the KSFE raids exposed the fissures within the CPI(M)?

Of late, the Pinarayi Vijayan-led Left government in Kerala is in the news for the wrong reasons: from the gold smuggling case to the KSFE raids, which seems to have opened rifts within the ruling CPI(M)

December 07, 2020 / 15:00 IST
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Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan
Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan

The controversy over the Kerala Vigilance and Anti-Corruption Bureau (VACB)’s simultaneous raids at 40 branches of the Kerala State Financial Enterprises (KSFE) on November 27 has been raging since then. Finance Minister Thomas Isaac, the minister in-charge of the KSFE, went on a tirade against the VACB, and questioned the motives of the agency and those pulling the strings from behind.

The obvious allusion was to Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan, who also holds the home portfolio and under whom the VACB operates. Vijayan has of late come under criticism from various quarters for his perceived lack of control over the police department.

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Isaac kept attacking the ‘manner of the raids’ and the vigilance department for three consecutive days, backed by President of the Centre for Indian Trade Unions (CITU) and senior Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader Anathalavattom Anandan, calling it a conspiracy to tarnish the credibility of the KSFE, a Miscellaneous Non-Banking Financial Company (MNBFC) and a public sector chit fund company owned by the Government of Kerala.

The 51-year-old KSFE has been a flagship profit-making venture with an annual turnover of Rs 50,000 crore, and has been dominating a market which has spawned many small private chit fund companies.