Former Coal Secretary PC Parakh, against whom the CBI has registered a case for allegedly favouring Hindalco for coal block allocation in Odisha, has accused CBI Director Ranjit Sinha of having acted against him to impress the Supreme Court and wondered why he chose not to mention Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in the conspiracy because he had taken the decision in the matter.
At the same time, to be fair to the Prime Minister, he said at no time the PMO made recommendation or exerted pressure in favour of any party.
In his book
“Perhaps to impress the Supreme Court and the people at large of your new found freedom from the cage,” Parakh has remarked in his book hinting towards the observation made by the apex court when it had termed the CBI as “caged parrot“.
Reacting to the personal attack, CBI Director Ranjit Sinha told PTI that “we can reply to all the accusations point by point but since the case is being monitored by the Supreme Court, I will not say anything.”
He termed the book as a “typical babu book where the author has indulged in self-glorification”.
In his book, the former IAS officer from Andhra Pradesh, questioned the decision of the CBI to register a case against him and Kumarmanglam Birla for alleged conspiracy in handing over the Talabira-II coal block to Hindalco and not registering a case against Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who was in-charge of the Coal Ministry.
“If Mr Sinha was convinced that the Hindalco allocation was a conspiracy and had he the courage of conviction, he ought to have named the Prime Minister in the conspiracy,” Parakh said.
Though, Parakh, 68, writes that it was his decision to bring in Hindalco for Talabira coal project and that there was no pressure exerted on him by the PMO in this case, he, however, raised nine questions in his book, published by Manas Publications, asking why were not the files of PMO scrutinised before naming him in the FIR.
“If the CBI smelled conspiracy and corruption, why did it not name the Prime Minister in the FIR?” he asked, and asserted that any Secretary only recommends to the Minister and the final decision has to be taken by the political executive.
The author said, “however, it must be said to the credit of the Prime Minister that at no time did the PMO make recommendations or exert pressure in favour of any party. Even in the case of Hindaclo, where the CBI has decided to register an FIR, the request was only to re-examine the case on merit.”