Govt. awaits CBI advice
on recent raids
The government will wait for the advice of the Central Bureau of Investigation about its
findings following the recent raids on the residential and
office premises of three Prasar Bharati officers, before taking any
action.
Information and Broadcasting minister Sushma Swaraj told
newspersons on Friday that three of the six persons whose homes and
offices were raided are no longer in Prasar Bharati, while a fourth
is already under transfer orders.
While former acting director general K. S. Sarma (then
additional secretary in the I and B Ministry) is now an additional
secretary in another ministry, both Rakesh Bahadur and Sanjiv
Datta are not working in Prasar Bharati.
Dr P. K. Seth had been transferred to the Research and Analysis
Wing but has not yet joined, but orders are being issued to relieve
him immediately, the minister said. This leaves only deputy director general (Commercial
and Sports) K. Kunhikrishna and Anurag Mishra.
The minister said the CBI is yet to reveal what it found during its raids,
raids, which were conducted following allegations of scams in
telecasts of sports events on Doordarshan.
Financial expert Arun Agarwal, in a report last year, made serious allegations about losses
incurred by Doordarshan because of certain deals with regard to the
telecast rights of the ICC Knockout tournment in Dhaka in October
1998.
The report revealed that Doordarshan suffered losses running
into several crores of rupees from telecasts of several sporting
events during 1998-99 either because of some
collusion/misappropriation or because of lack of proper planning by
Doordarshan officials.
The report related to sports events in 1998-99 and the working of the Sports Consortium, which had been formed when S S Gill was CEO of Prasar Bharati.
UNI