Dear Friends:

The article below is from the Telegraph UK published this morning (23 03 2012). 
The photograph below is typical all over India as I have learned.


-bhuban


Indian government accused of 'looting the country' over coal mining contracts

India's Congress-led government was yesterday accused of "looting the country" 
after a leaked report claimed it had lost $210bn (£133bn) by awarding coal 
mining contracts to hand-picked companies.




People scavenge coal illegally at an open-cast mine in the village of 
Bokapahari  Photo: AP









By Dean Nelson, New Delhi

4:36PM GMT 22 Mar 2012




The disclosure by the country's Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) office 
caused uproar among MPs who called on Dr Manmohan Singh, the prime minister, to 
explain why the government had "favoured" certain companies in 155 coal fields.

Opposition MPs decried the waste of precious natural assets which they said 
should be for the benefit of the nation rather than corporate favourites.

$210bn is more than enough to feed every one of the 354 million people living 
under the poverty line in India for three years, according to government 
poverty figures released earlier this week.

Anti-graft campaigners said the scale of waste in this latest controversy 
indicated that a series of corruption scandals in the last two years had been 
just the "tip of the iceberg".

Several senior government figures, including former Telecoms minister A Raja 
and the head of Delhi's 2010 Commonwealth Games organising committee, have been 
jailed on corruption charges along with a leader of one of the government's key 
coalition partners.

Several top companies have had their contracts to operate 2G mobile phone 
networks cancelled following allegations that several were awarded fraudulently 
and that the government had lost $38bn in revenues because the licenses were 
give away too cheaply.

The Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party's Prakash Javdekar said the 
government would not be allowed to continue "looting the country"," while a 
leading Communist Party of India figure, D Raja, said the latest scandal showed 
the Congress-led coalition was "favouring all corporate houses and big business 
houses in the country".
Manish Sisodia, a leader of the India Against Corruption campaign group, said 
Indians should rise up and demand tougher anti-graft laws.
"The gravity of these scams and frequency with which they are being exposed 
makes one realise that all these scams so far were just tip of the ice berg," 
he said.
India needs a powerful Lokpal, or independent ombudsman, to "stop the ruling 
class from looting public money," he added.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who oversaw the coal ministry during some of the 
period covered by the report, made no comment during his appearance in 
parliament on Thursday. The prime minister's office called the estimated loss 
"exceedingly misleading".
The Comptroller and Auditor General's draft report, which was leaked to the 
Times of India, strongly criticised the government for failing to get the best 
return for India's people.
"Every action/decision of the State or its agencies/instrumentalities to give 
largesse/confer benefits must be sound, transparent, discernible and well 
defined policy. the natural resources cannot be allocated to private hands 
without ensuring that the benefit of low cost of the natural resources would be 
passed on to the citizens," it stated.
Following the outcry over its report, the Comptroller and Auditor General said 
the figures for the projected loss to the government had yet to be finalised 
and that the leaked report is a very preliminary draft. The Coal Ministry 
denied there had been any wrongdoing





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