New Delhi, May 6 (PTI): The Congress, under fire in Parliament over reports of kickbacks in the AgustaWestland helicopter deal, on Friday demanded a Supreme Court monitored probe into the matter.
The deal was cancelled in 2013 during the term of the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance government, after reports that Agusta's parent Finmeccanica had bribed unnamed Indians.
Senior Congress leader Jyotiraditya Scindia said talks for the deal began in 1999, when the National Democratic Alliance led by the Bharatiya Janata Party was in power.
”Do not level baseless allegations. Answer the questions which we are raising. Supreme Court monitored investigation should happen and its reports should be placed in the House every three months,” Scindia said in the Lok Sabha during a debate on the issue.
He said it was the practice of the BJP members to level baseless allegations to create an illusion.
”But we too have taken an oath that we will break that 'mayajaal' (illusion) and place the facts in front of the country and this House,” Scindia said.
The reality is that this deal was started during the NDA regime in 1999 and the issue they are talking about bringing down the maximum operating height of the helicopter from 6000 to 4500 metres, it was done by NDA government in 2003 and not the UPA, he said.
In December 2003, a letter was written from the Prime Minister's Office to change the norms and make it 4500 metres, Scindia said.
The moment the issue came out in newspapers, he said, the UPA government wrote to the embassy in Rome that investigation should be done as early as possible.
In April 2012, it was in fact the UPA government which ordered the Central Bureau of Investigation o probe the matter, Scindia said,.
The contract was cancelled on February 15, 2013, and a notice was served on AugustaWestland.
The UPA government cancelled the contract on January 1, 2014.
In February 2013, the UPA government gave the case to the CBI and within 12 days, a preliminary inquiry was lodged, he informed adding Letter Rogatory too was issued to Tunisia, Mauritius and Italy.
“...24 months have passed of your government, what have you done in 720 days of your government? Have you brought in a single penny? Have you even identified a single person who has indulged in corruption,” he asked.
“In March 2013, we in the House had proposed to form a JPC (joint parliamentary committee). Why did the NDA oppose that proposal? People of this country should ask why you opposed that proposal in 2013,” the Congress leader said.
He said the banning and blacklisting of companies too was started by the UPA government. The then Defence Minister had stated that no deal would happen with AgustaWestland, Scindia said, adding it was UPA government which had brought Rs 2,063 crore.
Stoutly defending his party President, the Congress leader said nowhere did the name of Sonia Gandhi was mentioned.
“Whenever the name of Sonia Gandhi comes, they start feeling irritated and they are afraid also from her because she is a 'lioness' that is why they (BJP) are afraid of her,” he said, adding that the mention about the “family” was of Tyagi's family and not the Gandhi family.
On the term 'AP', he said there are so many people who could have this abbreviation and “we have the Gujarat Chief Minister whose initials are also AP...on such things they are labelling the allegations”, he added.
Continuing his tirade against the Modi government, Scindia said “you have not been able to get the responses from those countries in two years time ...It was our Defence Minister who stated that corruption is there in the deal and we will investigate that.”
Despite being blacklisted, the NDA government permitted the company to send RFI (request for information) for some contracts.
“Your (BJP) party president said that this is a bogus company and you invited a bogus company in Make in India. They have to give the answers to this,” he said.
“Today we have put our balance sheet in front of you. Show us your balance sheet of two years. Tell the country that in two years what you have done,” he said.