India acquits ex-telco minister of corruption

Published Thu, Dec 21, 2017 · 09:00 AM

[NEW DELHI] India's former telecoms minister was cleared Thursday of his alleged role in a multi-billion dollar rort that ballooned into one of the country's biggest-ever political scandals.

A special court in New Delhi acquitted A Raja of corruption and also dropped charges against a slew of other bureaucrats and corporate executives implicated in the 2008 scandal that cost the state billions in lost revenue.

Judge O P Saini said India's federal investigators, who brought the explosive charges against the high-profile defendants, could not prove allegations of criminality.

"I have absolutely no hesitation in holding that (the) prosecution has miserably failed to prove any charge against any accused," Judge Saini told a packed courtroom.

Raja, who appeared in court alongside the other accused, smiled after the verdict as his supporters let off firecrackers outside.

The Central Bureau of Investigation, which prosecuted the case, said it would read the full judgement before considering any further action.

The so-called "2G spectrum scam" came to light in 2010 when a government auditor estimated it cost treasury as much as US$39 billion in lost revenues - equal to India's defence budget.

India's then-ruling Congress party was accused of under-pricing licenses and favouring certain firms during the tender process, seriously damaging the administration of former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

In 2012, India's top court cancelled 122 licenses for eight firms amid allegations of bribery and wholesale fraud.

Time Magazine in 2011 included the scam on a list of historic scandals alongside "Watergate" that brought down US President Richard Nixon in 1974.

Analysts say the fallout weakened the Congress party and contributed to its heavy defeat at the 2014 general elections.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won that poll in a landslide, campaigning in part on a pledge to clean up corruption.

Mr Singh, who was not linked to the scandal but was accused of turning a blind eye as prime minister, said the Congress party finally stood vindicated.

"I am glad that the court has announced unambiguously that all this massive propoganda... was being done against the UPA (Congress-led alliance) without any foundation," he told reporters after the verdict.

Senior Congress politician Shashi Tharoor said it was clear that "innocent people have been wronged".

"Justice has worked as it is supposed to work in our country," he said.

But top officials from the ruling BJP called for an appeal.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said Congress should not treat this verdict as "a badge of honour".

"That this was a corrupt, dishonest policy has already been held by the Supreme Court," he told reporters.

Raja, a politician from southern Tamil Nadu state, resigned as minister in 2010 but always maintained his innocence.

Corruption in public life has become a burning issue in India, with demonstrations attracting tens of thousands in recent years calling for cleaner politics and business.

India ranked 79 out of 176 countries on Transparency International's global corruption index in 2016.

AFP

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