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Objection to CBI director not personal, says Jaitley

Last Updated 25 November 2012, 12:30 IST

 Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha Arun Jaitley today said their suggestion to the Prime Minister regarding appointment of CBI director was entirely for "institutional reforms" and not person-centric.

"We were concerned only and only with institutional reforms (regarding CBI), our suggestion was not person centric and if somebody deliberately tries to misunderstand this fact then he is being more than unfair," Jaitley said here today.

Jaitley along with BJP leader in Lok Sabha Shushma Swaraj had written letters to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh saying that the appointment of new CBI Director Ranjit Sinha should not have been done when the Rajya Sabha Select Committee had recommended that such appointments should be done through a collegium.

However, the Prime Minister, in his reply, had said "insinuation that the appointment was made to preempt the procedure recommended by the Select Committee is wholly unwarranted and devoid of any merit."

"The experience in relation to the functioning of CBI over the last few years has been extremely disappointing. The fact that the Select Committee was absolutely unanimous that a collegium of Prime Minister, Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha and the Chief Justice of India would appoint CBI director, this itself is a very significant institutional reform," Jaitley said.

"Sushmaji and I had therefore suggested to the Prime Minister that once this has been unanimously recommended the government ought to have waited for few days. Heaven does not fall if the post is vacant for four or five days," he said.

"Obviously the government was not serious about the issue, it wanted to frustrate this recommendation and therefore few hours before the recommendations of the Select Committee were tabled in Parliament, the government made the appointment unilaterally of the CBI director," Jaitley said.

Speaking on the issue of allegations of corruption against BJP president Nitin Gadkari, Jaitley said, "Our party president has already said that allegations should be probed, the probe is going on and to make any other statement at this stage will not be proper. However, in Congress those who face allegations of corruption are not ready even to face probe."

On BJP leaders Shatrughan Sinha and Ram Jethmalani airing their grievances in public on the issue of resignation of Gadkari and appointment of CBI director respectively, Jaitley said the party has already conveyed that it would be better if they raise such issues inside the party forum.

Regarding former CAG official R P Singh's recent statement about the 2G scam, Jaitley alleged, "This government has launched the war on the office of the CAG as on other constitutional authorities, and the present attack seems to be choreographed by the ruling party."

"It appears when Parliament is in session and in order to give the issue a hype a normally reluctant participant in this debate, the AICC president (Sonia Gandhi), participates in this choreography herself," Jaitley said on comments made by Sonia Gandhi on the issue of R P Singh's revelations.

"This country is not concerned for a former disgruntled officer, we are concerned with the CAG as an institution. Views of disgruntled former employee are redundant, only views of CAG as a constitutional authority are valuable," the leader further said.

Regarding BJP's cold shoulder to West Bengal Chief Minister Mamta Banerjee's no confidence motion against UPA government, Jaitley said, "In Parliament there is more support for a resolution against FDI and so we have chosen it as a first step. After that we can think of any other thing."

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(Published 25 November 2012, 12:04 IST)

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