Pinarayi Vijayan is the state Secretary of the Kerala CPI(M) and is also the
member of the Central Polit bureau, which is the highest decision making body of
the Party. The 19th Congress of the CPI(M) had elected a 87 member Central
Committee, which on April 03, 2008 elected a 15 Member Polit Bureau. Pinarayi
Vijayan is a member of both these. The other members of this Polit Bureau
include such stalwarts as the General Secretary Prakash Karat along with his
wife Brinda, Sitaram Yechury, Biman Basu, Manik Sarkar, the two CPI(M) Chief
ministers Buddhadev Bhattacharya and V S Achuthanandan along with others. He is
thus among the most important members of the CPI)M).
The so-called Lavalin case relates to memorandum of understanding (MoU) Kerala
State Electricity Board (KSEB) signed with SNC-Lavalin, a Canadian company in
August 1995. During the initial period of the contract, G. Karthikeyan of the
Congress Party was the Minister for Electricity. Later during further contracts
in February 1997 Pinarai Vijayan was the Minister for Electricity.
Later the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) found that Lavalin was
only a consultant intermediary and not the original equipment manufacturer and
that the supply of goods and services was made by other firms at a much higher
cost leading to excess expenditure. According to the CAG, various avoidable (and
at times deliberate) failures on the part of the Board and the government to
properly execute the deal resulted in heavy losses to the government of an
amount nearly Rs 25 crores. On 16 January 2007, Kerala High Court ordered a CBI
enquiry into the scandal. On February 19, 2008, the CBI informed High court of
Kerala that the investigation was progressing and hinted at the complicity of
former Electricity Ministers Pinarayi Vijayan and G. Karthikeyan. On 21 January
2009, the CBI filed a progress report on the investigation in the Kerala High
Court where it named Pinarayi Vijayan as the 9th accused. A total of 11 persons
have been arraigned. As per CBI's version Vijayan, while serving as Electricity
Minister between May 1996 and October 1998, colluded with K. Mohanachandran,
Principal Secretary (Power) in a criminal conspiracy already in motion in the
matter of awarding supply contracts of the projects to Lavalin. The
investigations revealed that the supply contract for renovation and
modernisation of the Panniyar, Shengulam and Pallivasal hydel projects was given
to SNC Lavalin at an exorbitant rate and the per MW cost for the same was the
highest. This caused a loss to the Government of Kerala with corresponding
wrongful. Thus CBI requested an order for prosecuting Vijayan.
Thus came the question of Prosecution. As per our statues, section 197 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure deals with prosecution of Judges and public servants.
Section 197(1) states that when any person who is or was a Judge or Magistrate
or a public servant not removable from his office save by or with the sanction
of the Government is accused of any offence alleged to have been committed by
him while acting or purporting to act in the discharge of his official duty no
court shall take cognizance of such offence except with the previous sanction of
the concerned government.
There are two important Supreme Court judgements in this regards, both exactly
opposite to each other. While in the state of Uttar Pradesh vs. Paras Nath
Singh, the Supreme Court has ruled that a public servant cannot be given the
protection of sanction under Section 197 CrPC if he is facing allegations of
indulging in criminal offences. The Court said that forgery, criminal
conspiracy, cheating and taking gratification cannot form part of official
discharge of duty by a public servant saying-''A public servant, however, is not
entitled to indulge in criminal activities,''. The apex court also noted, "It is
no part of the duty of a public servant while discharging his official duties to
commit forgery of the type covered by the aforesaid offences. Want of sanction
under Section 197 of the code is therefore no bar." At the same time, in another
case related to some senior police officers of Maharashtra another bench of the
SC had held the prosecution of these officers under the Maharashtra Control of
Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) illegal, on the ground that the accused cannot be
prosecuted without proper prior sanction.
The CPI (M) leadership and the workers, both at the Center and in the state of
Kerala have refused to take this prosecution lightly decided to fight it out.
While the Press Statement in its statement dated June 8, 2009 said that the CBI
case "is politically motivated" and that "it is unfortunate that the Governor of
Kerala decided to grant permission to the Central Bureau of Investigation to
initiate prosecution proceedings" , the workers on the street took the message
wholeheartedly and went for a heavy rampage and large-scale ransacking and
violence. Previously Vijayan had also  issued threats of retaliation and
punishment to K. Gopalakrishnan, Editor, Mathrubhumi Malayalam for having played
a lead role in exposing and pursuing the Lavlin case.
Thus all these efforts are being made to save a person who is primarily being
seen as an accomplish in a criminal case where he has supposedly misused his
official position to cause heavy losses to the State exchequer. This from a
party that has always boasted of belonging to the toiling masses- the workers
and the peasants. But more important than the individuals, it is the basic legal
postulate that I want to harp upon. Do we really need section 197 of the CrPC?
Isn't this provision of law being misused persistently or is being used
selectively for political ends? For the same criminal acts, the governments and
the authorities go by different yardsticks. Against some they grant the
prosecution sanction while for others they withhold it for years.
From all this, it seems that this provision of section 197 CrPC is primarily
being misused or is being used for specific purposes. At least, it shall be
scrapped for cases related with forgery, misappropriation, cheating, misuse of
official positions for wrongful gains etc. This is something that is immediately
required.


Dr Nutan Thakur

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