Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Understand­ing the row between govt’s legal officers

- Bhadra Sinha bhadra. sinha@ hindustant­imes. com

NEW DELHI: The myth that CBI is an autonomous probe agency has been busted with its director admitting to have shared draft status report on its investigat­ion into the coalgate scam before submitting it to the Supreme Court. This has undermined the agency’s credibilit­y as a fair investigat­or, say legal experts.

Senior advocate Dushyant Dave said it was an extremely sad day for Indian judiciary.

“The law minister, Attorney General and Additional Solicitor General as also the high officials such as the CBI and joint secretarie­s have got together to undermine the investigat­ion and interfere with SC proceeding­s,” he added.

CBI could not have shown the report, especially in light of serious allegation­s against the government including the Prime Minister’s Office, he said.

Former additional solicitor general Raju Ramachandr­an felt since the cat was out of the bag, time had come for SC to step in and unequivoca­lly lay down guidelines to insulate the CBI.

“In the absence of a legislatio­n SC will be perfectly justified either on the lines of Vishaka and Prakash Singh to give clear directions for the CBI to not to share its investigat­ion details with anyone,” he said.

Ramchandra­n said CBI’s investigat­ion against political leaders in the past now smacks of influence.

“They were all tainted and done at government’s behest,” he added.

According to Dave CBI had compromise­d itself long ago. Its probe against Mulayam Singh is a case in point.

“When the government wanted CBI to go after Mulayam Singh Yadav, they came with affidavits against him. And when it wanted his support, CBI went slow on him.”

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