http://scroll.in/article/776817/the-corruption-in-ddca-was-because-of-jaitleys-connivance-alleges-bishan-singh-bedi

CRICKET CORRUPTION

'The corruption in DDCA was because of Jaitley’s connivance', alleges
Bishan Singh Bedi

In an exclusive interview, India’s spinning great rebuts Finance
Minister Arun Jaitley’s claim that he wasn’t involved in the
day-to-day functioning of the Delhi cricket body.
Ajaz Ashraf  · Yesterday · 06:05 pm

India’s spinning great, Bishan Singh Bedi, has been battling
corruption in the Delhi and District Cricket Association for well over
three decades. In this interview to Scroll, Bedi alleges that the DDCA
became a hotbed of corruption under Finance Minister Arun Jaitley’s
tenure as its president, rebuts his claim that he wasn’t involved in
the organisation's day-to-day functioning, and shares details of how
Jaitley ignored complaints about misdoings.

Why do you and other former cricketers sound so disappointed, even
bitter, about Finance Minister Arun Jaitley’s tenure as DDCA’s
president between 1999 and 2013
We have had a fairly long battle with DDCA’s corrupt style of
administering cricket. It just so happens that during Jaitley’s tenure
as president, corruption in DDCA grew manifold.

In what sense did corruption grow manifold?
Documents have been obtained under the Right to Information Act and it
is quite self-explanatory how corruption grew. The charges against
DDCA are many, but let me cite a few of these. The contract for the
reconstruction of the Feroz Shah Kotla stadium was awarded by DDCA to
the Engineers Projects India Limited, a public sector undertaking, on
May 12, 2003. It was supposed to have been completed in a year at a
cost of Rs 24 crore. Subsequently, DDCA expanded the civil work to
include construction of corporate boxes. The reconstruction was said
to have been completed by December 15, 2008, at a revised cost of Rs
57 crore.

However, DDCA officials went on a contract-awarding spree – for
supposedly more "civil work", electric work, interiors and installing
of  generators. DDCA documents show that an amount of Rs 114 crore was
spent on building the stadium till 2012. It is, however, alleged that
another Rs 25 crore was spent between 2012 and 2015 on paying
companies which had done little or no work. The question is: How did a
stadium, envisaged to be built at a cost of Rs 24 crore, ended up
costing Rs 140 crore?

One of the companies which bagged lucrative contracts was Kaushnik
Buildcast Private Ltd and a related entity, Kaushnik Fab. Both were
given contracts worth Rs 11 crore for "data cabling" and "interior
work"! Documents reveal that Kaushnik Buildcast Pvt Ltd was
incorporated as a company on June 29, 2009 – that is, a good six
months after DDCA officially declared that work on the stadium had
been completed by Dec 15, 2008. Then again, Kaushnik Buildcast Pvt Ltd
turned out to be a front company with a fake address. Contracts were
awarded without calling for competing bids.

The various inquiry reports have a plethora of information which
suggests a web of financial transactions involving sham companies with
fake names and even fake addresses. There are allegations of
round-tripping, of contracts being awarded without tender, for work
which allegedly did not work.

Apart from these charges of fraud in the reconstruction of Feroz Shah
Kotla stadium, nepotism in selection and corruption in DDCA had always
been there. Look, when I first met Jaitley…

Which was when?
It was when he just had an open heart surgery (in 2005). I went to see
him in the hospital with Vijay Mehra (former Indian batsman who died
in 2006). I thought Jaitley was reasonably good news for cricket. He
was nice, suave and, in many ways, quite civilised, which is quite a
rare thing to happen in DDCA. Since then, I have been acquainted with
him, met him a few times to talk cricket. By and large, he was clear
that Delhi cricket should flourish. I can say today that he didn’t
realise the chaos he was getting into. I did think Jaitley would make
a very sincere effort to clean up the mess in DDCA.

But, as the way things unfolded, we cricketers were very
disillusioned. And that was because he allowed himself to be sucked
into the system.

When he became DDCA president in 1999, did you support his candidature?
No, no, no, I had nothing to do with DDCA, never.

Before (in the 1980s), we had a fight with the Mehras (Ram Prakash
Mehra and his nephew KK Mehra) and we were able to oust them. We then
sought some political help. That help came from (Congress leader)
Kamal Nath. We asked him to root out the proxy system through which
officer-bearers of DDCA are elected. (DDCA is registered as a company.
Under the Companies Act, members or shareholders can cast their votes
through their nominees. In effect, the nominee becomes the voter.)

Kamal Nath said he would look into it. For two-three months, I was the
sports secretary (of DDCA). It was an ad hoc arrangement. KC Sharma,
an IAS official who was in the Home Ministry, was made the president.

Before the DDCA election, I reminded Kamal Nath that he had promised
to remove the proxy system. He said, "Bishan, this is what will give
us the numbers". I said, "Nothing doing. My entire fight is to abolish
the proxy system". I refused to be party to it. I remember the meeting
was at Kamal Nath’s residence at New Friends Colony. He said to me,
"You should be the governor of the Red Cross". I told Nath that he was
no one to tell me what I should be or shouldn’t be. I declared I
wouldn’t contest in the elections.

Sunil Dev (currently, honorary sports secretary and once one of
India’s most powerful cricket administrators) grabbed the opportunity.
There are good many people in India who are willing to wag their
tails.  What do you think is happening today? There are all wagging
their tails. Kamal Nath, too, derived mileage out of cricket then. But
I think he realised it was taking too much of his time. He opted out.
So Sunil Dev and CK Khanna (currently, Vice-President DDCA) began to
perpetuate their rule.

Jaitley has allowed the corruption to continue. As DDCA president, he
is one of the signatories to the audited accounts; accounts which are
fudged. The siphoning of funds has been happening right under his
nose.

Jaitley came in 1999. Were you associated with DDCA then?
No, I was out of it.

But six years later, in 2005, you met Jaitley and you thought he would
clean up the mess in DDCA.
Well, I was hoping. Honestly speaking, I did think he would clean up the system.

What happened thereafter?
There was a clamour against the manner in which cricket was being
administered in Delhi. There were allegations of nepotism in cricket
selection. The situation was terrible. It prompted someone to moot the
idea of forming a Cricket Improvement Committee. To this committee,
they recommended Madan Lal, Surinder Khanna, Kirti Azad, Maninder
Singh (all former Test cricketers) and me. They made five of us
members but also put in 16 of theirs in the Cricket Improvement
Committee. We met three or four times, but didn’t get a clear idea of
our role.

Subsequently, a meeting was convened at Jaitley’s residence. We (the
five) were there, as were other members. Jaitley was chairing the
meeting. Present there was this ill-mannered guy, (Vinod K.) Tihara
(currently, DDCA sports committee member). You should have seen his
behaviour – it was unbelievable. The way Tihara was pouncing on
Jaitley, the abusive language he was using… it was shocking. He was
behaving like a dada. Because Tihara is said to possess many proxies,
I suppose he could be rude.

Ultimately, I couldn’t take it. I told Jaitley, "Mr. Jaitley, I take a
very strong objection to his behaviour. This is no way to address you.
I don’t think we will get anywhere as long as this gentleman remains
sitting here".

To this, Jaitley mumbled, "No, no… let us continue".

I insisted, “To have this meeting, you have to chuck this man out. Or
I am walking out.”

I walked out.

Didn’t Jaitley try to hold you back?
He sent a man behind me. I told the man I wasn’t going to sit in such a meeting.

Then Jaitley called me over to his residence, for a one-to-one. He
started to speak against Kirti Azad. I told Jaitley I wouldn’t allow
him to play the game of dividing us cricketers. Jaitley is a master at
it – he would speak against me to Chetan Chauhan (former Test player
and DDCA vice-president), and badmouth him to me. Jaitley was,
basically, trying to wean me away from Kirti. Because I refused to
hear anything against Kirti, the meeting with Jaitley ended.

We also used to take on Jaitley at Annual General Body Meetings. But
the AGMs would get over in five-ten minutes.

Jaitley would be there, right?
He was the one who would to reply to our questions. The others didn’t
have the courage.

What kind of questions?
About the maladministration, about how the funds were being utilised,
about the shocking levels of corruptions.

But Jaitley says he wasn’t involved in day-to-day functioning.
Well, if he says he wasn’t involved, then he should tell us who was
involved. Assume you are the boss of a media organisation. Can you
claim you don’t know what kind of activities four-five journalists
under you are involved in? The blame lies on you.

As per your experience, it seems Jaitley was very much involved in
day-to-day functioning.
He knew about it.

Knew what? Allegations pertaining to ferreting away of DDCA funds?
Absolutely! Let me spell it out explicitly – the corruption in DDCA
was because of Jaitley’s connivance.

What about nepotism in selection of players?
It was rampant. There were plenty of examples of overage boys playing
in Under-14 or Under-19 teams.

Jaitley didn’t respond to such allegations?
He shut himself off from things that were right. CK Khanna would
appoint selectors and they would choose the boys they wanted. Khanna
is not only the vice-president of DDCA, but also of BCCI (Board of
Control for Cricket in India). Can you believe it, he is the convenor
of Under-14 cricket.

What’s the game here?
It is because Under-14 cricket, or junior cricket, keeps the
kitchen-fire of many officials burning.

Are you saying that you can get into a junior team by paying officials?
Absolutely. Why do you think Nikhil Chopra resigned as chairman of
junior cricket, and so did Sunil Valson? And Chetan Chauhan (laughs)…

Chetan Chauhan was a stroke-less wonder of cricket, but is seen a deft
player in politics.
It was I who brought him to Delhi. His father was a colonel and he
requested me to give him a chance in Delhi. This was because Chetan
wasn’t getting ample opportunities in West Zone. I was quite impressed
by his hard work and dedication. He was limited, but he was solid
within his limitations. I could never imagine he would spread himself
(that is, acquire influence) the way he has.

You are said to have written 200 letters to Jaitley complaining about
the functioning of DDCA.
Yes, I did. But he never replied. In fact, last July, I wrote to Prime
Minister Narendra Modi. I didn’t receive any reply.

So what did Jaitley gain from allowing DDCA to become a cesspool of corruption?
Tell me, what hasn’t he gained from it? On Thursday, Dec 18, he said
he was president of DDCA till 2013. But even today, not a leave stirs
in DDCA without his permission, not even in BCCI. Who do you think has
appointed Rajeev Shukla as chairman of the IPL [Indian Premier League]
governing council? Do you know who are among the directors of Hockey
India? The answer: Rajeev Shukla, Arun Jaitley and Narinder Batra
Could you tell me why? If there is nothing to gain from all this, then
why do they indulge in so much of manipulation?

In other words, contrary to Jaitley’s assertions, you are saying he is
guilty of the corruption in BCCI?
Tell me, who appointed Sneh Prakash Bansal as the current DDCA
president? I will narrate to you a recent incident to demonstrate
Jaitley’s clout. It happened in the recent Test match against South
Africa in Delhi.

The Delhi government decided to felicitate some of the former Test
cricketers. I advised them not to. It was amidst a Test match. I was
principally opposed to diluting its sanctity. But the government was
adamant – it said the BCCI had felicitated (former Test player)
Virender Sehwag, why couldn’t they? The Delhi government wanted to
honour the Delhi players who were part of the Indian teams which won
the World Cup in 1983 and 2011 plus a few of us former cricketers.
Since the government was insistent, I agreed.

They sent a car to fetch me at an unearthly 7 am. It was on the fourth
day of the Delhi Test. I reached early because my mobility is a bit
restricted. Sehwag was on his way, so was Kirti and Sharmila Tagore
(representing Tiger Pataudi). But when I reached there I was told the
programme had been cancelled. I was told Chief Minister Arvind
Kejriwal had fallen ill. I was puzzled.

I called up Kejriwal and I inquired after his health. He said, "I am
fine, but they (DDCA officials) told us at 10.30 pm the previous night
that they wouldn’t host the programme". I inquired as to what had
happened. The night before the Deputy Chief Minister (Manish Sisodia)
was present at the Kotla to do a recci [reconnaissance]. But AJ (Arun
Jaitley) instigated Board members to disallow the hosting of the
felicitation programme. All three – the DDCA, the BCCI and the ICC
(International Cricket Council) – raised all types of objections. I
had anticipated it. The Aam Aadmi Party hadn’t. Kejriwal is
inexperienced, but he is very sincere. He will commit mistakes but he
will own them up. At the same time, he is very clear in his mind what
he wants to do.

Anyway, at night, Ravinder Manchanda (Honorary Treasurer), CK Khanna
and others kept raising objection. They also told AAP people to speak
to Jaitley. There you are – they, the DDCA officials, can’t do
anything without Jaitley’s consent. Personally, I was very glad that
the felicitation programme didn’t happen. You don’t muck up with a
Test match.

(Laughs) Now the way the CBI raid was conducted (on Kejriwal’s
Principal Secretary), Jaitley has ended up axing his own foot.

Why do you say that?
It has backfired on him. I find it funny. But it was waiting to
happen. The mess in cricket is simply enormous. This is happening in
Delhi, mind you. Imagine what is happening in Hyderabad, Goa and such
other places. The BCCI is registered under the Societies Act, but its
affiliates – Punjab Cricket Association, Himachal Cricket Association,
Haryana Cricket Association – are registered as companies.

What is the purpose behind having such a structure?
The idea is to stay in power. It is this structure which allows proxy votes.

Jaitley didn’t try to reform the system, did he?
Ha, he perpetuated his rule through this system. There are groups in
DDCA which command a very high number of proxies. He had to listen to
them, agree to what they wanted to do.

So to stay at the helm of DDCA, Jaitley compromised himself?
Of course, compromise is the only word. In my worldview, the person
who compromises is very weak himself. I didn’t compromise with even my
father, that too, when I was in school. My father was brought up and
educated in Uttar Pradesh. My mother was illiterate. My father was a
social worker and people would come to visit him. In front of 20-30 of
them, my father wouldn’t refrain from scolding her. Away from the
gathering, my poor amma would cry.

When I was 12 or 13 years old, I told my Dad that even if he had to
reprimand my mother he shouldn’t do it before others, that he
shouldn’t make her cry. He got angry, began to shout at me. I said he
could call me names, but he ought not to never, ever scold or shout at
my mother before others. He got the message. This element of not
compromising is built into human personality.

I remember another incident. I was picked up for North Zone Schools. I
was the solitary player from the Punjab team. I was sitting in the
long-room of DDCA, wondering how I was to travel to Madras. After
about three hours of waiting, RP Mehra walked in. I stood up and did
namaste to him. RP Mehra looked through me. I told myself, “I will
never wish this man again.” Come on, couldn’t Mehra have shown some
warmth, warmly responded to a 14-year-old child? Subsequently, Mehra
would wish me first. And I would chuckle to myself and say, ‘The man
has learnt his lesson.’

But I must also add that RP Mehra was an angel compared to this lot.

RP Mehra ran DDCA for long, didn’t he?
Yes, but his heart was for cricket. He would tell me, "Win the Ranji
Trophy in my lifetime". We won in 1979. We had proved ourselves. I got
the boys together and we wrote down points for reforming cricket
administration. There was a furore. Mehra would say, "It is Bedi’s
Magna Carta". He was ultimately ousted from DDCA.

How would you rate Jaitley and other officials’ knowledge of cricket?
Zero, they wouldn’t be bothered. All that they are interested in is to
have their own selectors, their own boys in the teams, their own
people as team managers, even as team’s coach. When we were fighting
RP Mehra, there was not much money in cricket. Now there is enormous
money. Tell me, have you seen any event to promote cricket in Delhi? I
came to know this morning (Dec 18) that DDCA for the first time made
money out of a Test match. And that was because they didn’t run the
show.

How do you compare the reconstructed Feroz Shah Kotla stadium with
such facilities elsewhere?
It is horrendous. You should see the stadiums in Nagpur and Mohali.
The Feroz Shah stadium is very unfriendly for spectators. From parts
of the stadium you can’t even sight the ball. Facilities had never
been very good at the stadium. I remember I was once the captain and I
instructed no one – relatives or autograph hunters – were to enter the
long-room. My team was batting and I was snoozing. Suddenly, I awoke
to find people bustling around. I was told that the President of India
(Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed) wanted to use the toilet. There wasn’t a toilet
available even for the President of India! Can you imagine what the
facility must have been for the spectators?

But that was then. Hasn’t it improved now?
It is more or less the same. Go to the toilet located to the left of
the Willingdon Gate. MCD [Municipal Corporation of Delhi] is a chor
(corrupt) organisation. But even they wouldn’t have constructed such a
toilet as is there.

What about the toilet on which Rs 4.5 crore was spent
(laughs) That is the toilet I am talking about. You should see it. The
whole bloody place stinks. In his blog Arun Jaitely has written that
the Commonwealth stadium was constructed for Rs 900 crore. Well, I’d
want to tell him that the person (Suresh Kalmadi) who was responsible
for constructing the stadium has many cases pending against him.

So what is the step forward?
This company called DDCA has to be abolished. It has to be registered
under the Societies Act. You have to introduce secret ballot voting by
the members or the clubs. They do it in Karnataka, Mumbai and Tamil
Nadu. It is not that people don’t perpetuate their rule there. But
they do care about cricket.

Do you think the Delhi government would be right in instituting a
commission of inquiry into DDCA’s past misdeeds
Why not? Listen, we play cricket for the state of Delhi, not for the
Centre. Sport is a state subject. So the Delhi government will be well
within its right to constitute a commission of inquiry. There are all
these allegations and you need to prove or, alternatively, disapprove
them.

Can the Ministry of Corporate Affairs conduct an inquiry considering
that Jaitley heads it? Wouldn’t it constitute a conflict of interest?
That is an understatement. Jaitley has damaged cricket immensely. None
of the officials in DDCA could have done anything without his
approval. Not only in DDCA but even in BCCI. Even (former BCCI
president) N Srinivasan used to come to meet the Finance Minister. He
wouldn’t have gone to meet Jaitley to invite him to a birthday party.
Delhi cricket has touched such a low ebb only because of Jaitley.

Did you and others play an active role in getting the Delhi government
to investigate DDCA?
We met Kejriwal once or twice. He wanted to know what the furore was
all about in DDCA. Lawyer Rahul Mehra was instrumental in raising the
issue of corruption in DDCA. He has been at it for a long time. The
DDCA issue came up because it owed the government Rs 24 crore in
entertainment tax.

So when Kejriwal called you all, what did you all tell him?
We gave him all the papers. We cricketers used to hold press
conferences, show them the documents, but no one cared. If the nation
today has sat up and taken notice, it is only because Kejriwal has
jumped into the fray. Another politician has jumped into the fray, and
that is why everybody is taking notice. It has become a political
issue because of Kejriwal. But I must also say cricket isn’t
political. Yet, it is because of Kejriwal we have succeeded in
exposing the scam in DDCA. For that, we are grateful to Kejriwal and
company. It has never happened before that the chief minister of Delhi
would get so involved in finding out the happenings in DDCA.

Ajaz Ashraf is a journalist in Delhi. His novel, The Hour Before Dawn,
has as its backdrop the demolition of the Babri Masjid. It is
available in bookstores.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to