People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No. 34 August 26, 2012 |
The Coal Scam The
Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of THE report
of the
Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) on allocation
of coal blocks and
augmentation of coal production for the year ending March
2012 has come out
with startling revelations. The report
has
estimated that the allocation of coal blocks was not
done in a transparent
manner and since July 2004, 142 blocks were allocated
to various
governments and private parties. According to the CAG, these
allocations lacked
transparency and objectivity. As a
result, the
CAG estimates that the private coal block allottees have
made a whopping
financial gain to the tune of Rs 1.86 lakh crore. A
substantial part of
this could have accrued to the national exchequer if
the decision taken
way back in June 2004 to introduce competitive
bidding for such
allocations was implemented. The report notes that till
date, the
government of Coal, like
all
other natural resources, is a national reserve. Given the
fact that many public
sector undertakings and state government undertakings and
electricity boards
require coal for generating power for the people and the
economy, the
allocation of coal reserves must be done in such a manner as
to meet both the
need of the governmental agencies and through a
transparent and an
objective competitive bidding. The CPI(M) had suggested
that the reserves
should be so proportioned as to meet both these
objectives. Unfortunately,
the
refusal by the government of the day to heed this suggestion
has led to
arbitrariness in coal allocations, paving the way for
large-scale corruption through ‘sweet heart’
deals. The loss to the
national exchequer is, thus, larger than the presumptive
loss estimated by the
CAG in the 2G spectrum scam. The Polit
Bureau of
the CPI(M) demands that the prime minister, who held the
charge of the Coal
Ministry for some time when such allocations were made, must
answer to the parliament
and the nation why the modus
operendi for transparent allocations was not
worked out. All those
guilty of siphoning off huge resources must be identified
and brought to
book. Strict monitoring and guidelines for the future
must be announced
with parliament's approval.