Lokayukta recommends action against over 600 officials

High-level committee to study illegal mining has recommended action for seven of all-India cadre

PTI | October 25, 2011



The high-level committee set up to study the Lokayukta report on illegal mining pertaining to the role of officials indicted in it, has recommended action against over 600 officials, including seven of all-India cadre.

In its report submitted to the government on Monday, the committee, headed by additional chief secretary K Jairaj, devoted 26 pages pertaining to various recommendations to chief secretary S V Ranganath, official sources said here.

The committee, in its 317-page report, has recommended action against 617 officials, they said.

The Lokayukta in its report on illegal mining, has named about 787 officials, of whom 150 have passed away.

The committee had directed departments of revenue, mines and geology, police, commercial tax, forest and transport to serve notices on their officials indicted in the report and seek their replies.

Most of those who had replied to the notice had rejected charge of having received bribes from an aide of arrested mining baron G Janardhana Reddy, now in judicial custody in Hyderabad.

The Lokayukta report had observed that documents seized from Karapudi Mahesh, a trusted aide of Reddy, indicated that payments were made to officials of various departments, the sources said. .
The sources said the committee has recommended stringent action against some officials, including dismissal, but could not specify the number.

The committee recommended introduction of e-permit system and e-weighing bridges to check illegal transport of iron ore and over-loading in connivance with officials.

It also suggested the government to set up a monitoring committee to oversee whether licenced mines have been adhering to rules while mining iron ore with a view to curb illegal mining.

The Lokayukta report on illegal mining submitted to the government on July 27 stirred a hornet's nest in Karnataka and resulted in BJP prevailing upon an indicted B S Yeddyurappa to quit the chief minister's post.

CBI, which has been probing illegal mining in Andhra Pradesh under a supreme court directive, arrested Janardhana Reddy and his relative Srinivasa Reddy on August 4.

The government has to furnish an action taken report to Lokayukta within three months of submission of the report. The deadline ends on October 27.

Chief minister D V Sadananda Gowda-headed ministry has already written to the Lokayukta, seeking clarifications on its report on whether it probed the illegal mining on a complaint or reference by the government, an attempt seen as a move to buy some more time.

Comments

 

Other News

The economics of representation: Why women in power matter

India’s democracy has grown in scale, but not quite in balance. Women today are active participants in elections, influencing outcomes in ways that were not as visible earlier. Yet their presence in legislative institutions continues to lag behind. The Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam was meant to addres

India will be powerful, not aggressive: Bhaiyyaji

India is poised to emerge as a global power but will remain rooted in its civilisational ethos of non-aggression and harmony, former RSS General Secretary Suresh `Bhaiyyaji` Joshi has said.   He was speaking at the launch of “Rashtrabhav,” a book by Ravindra Sathe

AI: Code, Control, Conquer

India today stands at a critical juncture in the area of artificial intelligence. While the country is among the fastest adopters of AI in the world, it remains heavily reliant on technologies developed elsewhere. This paradox, experts warn, cannot persist if India seeks technological sovereignty.

RBI pauses to assess inflation risks, policy transmission

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has begun the new fiscal year with a calibrated pause, keeping the repo rate unchanged at 5.25 per cent in its April Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting. The decision, taken unanimously, reflects a shift from aggressive policy action to cautious observation after a signi

New pathways for tourism growth

Traditionally, India’s tourism policy has been based on three main components: the number of visitors, building tourist attractions and providing facilities for tourists. Due to the increase in climate-related issues and environmental destruction that occurred over previous years, policymakers have b

Is the US a superpower anymore?

On April 8, hours after warning that “a whole civilisation will die tonight,” US president Donald Trump, exhibiting his unique style of retreating from high-voltage brinkmanship, announced that he agreed to a two-week ceasefire with Iran. The weekend talks in Islamabad have failed and the futur


Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter