HomeNewsTrendsCurrent AffairsWhy chasing Manmahon Singh in coal scam will go nowhere?

Why chasing Manmahon Singh in coal scam will go nowhere?

CBI is on the wrong trail. Manmohan Singh isn't the one to chase; he may know who should be chased, but probably won't tell.

March 11, 2015 / 19:21 IST
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R JagannathanFirstpost.com

The summons issued to former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as an accused in the coal blocks allocation scam is probably a misdirection of the prosecution's efforts. Not only will it probably go nowhere, but it will effectively shift the focus away from the real scamsters to the man who happened to figuratively head the coal ministry at that time - and who is highly unlikely to have derived any personal or pecuniary benefit from the misallocations.

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To be sure, the case does have some reason to drag Manmohan Singh’s name into it. For, he did have a direct role to play in changing the coal allocation pattern recommended by the Screening Committee set up for the purpose.

The case, which involves the allocation of Talabira-II and Talabira-III coal blocks in Odisha’a Jharsuguda district in 2005, runs something like this: the blocks were originally allocated by the Screening Committee, headed by then Coal Secretary PC Parakh (also an accused in the case, along with Kumar Mangalam Birla of Hindalco), to the public sector Mahanadi Coalfields Ltd and Neyveli Lignite Corporation. But Birla wrote a letter to Manmohan Singh seeking his intervention. Singh directed him back to the coal ministry. (Read the full details in this Business Standard summation here)