Former CAG official R.P. Singh, who has stirred up a controversy, has rejected the allegations that the Congress has put him up to defend the Government on the audit report on 2G spectrum allocation which had estimated the presumptive loss of Rs 1.76 lakh crore.
“I don’t think it has any substance,” he told Karan Thapar in CNN-IBN’s Devil’s Advocate when asked about the charge that he has been put up by the Congress.
Singh said he has no connection with the UPA government nor he was having any interaction with it.
“Whatever I have said is not politically motivated and (my conscience) is very clear on that account,” he added.
Singh said he would have earned the “wrath” of his then boss Vinod Rai if he had not signed the final audit report on 2G spectrum which pegged presumptive loss of the airwaves auction at Rs 1.76 lakh crore.
“I knew the content of the report... There was a written order. I had to comply. There is no scope for refusing. You would earn wrath,” he said.
Singh said there “is no tradition of disagreeing or opposing orders of CAG in my department”.
He said that he had deleted certain figures on presumptive loss from the draft report but they were later incorporated in the final report and he knew about it.
Singh also said that he was misquoted by a newspaper that PAC Chairman Murli Manohar Joshi sought to influence the CAG report on 2G whilst the report was being prepared.