New Delhi:
Sources in the CBI say that during the raids at A Raja's home, they have seized three diaries, written in English, crammed with numbers that seem to indicate details of business transactions.
(Read: Will aides nail Raja in CBI grilling?)Till last month, when he was forced to resign, Mr Raja was the Telecom Minister. Before that, he was the Environment Minister in UPA1, and these diaries are reportedly from that period.
(Read: CBI raids A Raja's residences) |
(Read: What about NDA regime, asks Court)Mr Raja's homes in Delhi and his family's homes in Tamil Nadu were raided yesterday, along with the houses of four of his close aides and a man reported to be his business partner.
The raids came nearly a year after the CBI filed a police case against unknown officials in the Telecom Department for what's being described as India's largest-ever scam and centres on the allocation of valuable 2G spectrum in 2008 when Raja was Telecom Minister. Many said that the raids were a pretense by the government to suggest that the CBI investigation will indeed uncover those responsible for the great 2G robbery. Critics point out that Mr Raja and those who worked closely with him and are now being questioned had plenty of time to get rid of any documentary evidence of their alleged misdeeds. However, the CBI said yesterday after the raids that it had found "incriminating documents" but did not specify who these were likely to indict.
He was forced to exit last month after the government's auditor said that Mr Raja had cost the government 1.76 lakh crores by deciding that an auction for 2G spectrum was not necessary. Instead, he followed a first-come-first-served policy. The auditor's report also accused Mr Raja of using 2001 prices to determine the rates of licenses in 2008.
Mr Raja and his supporters have emphasised that the first-come-first-served principle was in fact introduced by his predecessors in the BJP-led NDA regime.
(Watch: What is 2G Spectrum)