[《The Jammu and Kashmir governor has scrapped a group insurance contract
bagged by a firm in Anil Ambani’s Reliance group, declaring he had
“personally” concluded that the entire deal was “full of fraud”.

The disclosure not only renews focus on the common Reliance factor at a
time the Rafale scandal is boiling afresh, it also helps Rahul Gandhi claim
a significant scalp.

Although governor Satya Pal Malik, who was with the BJP before taking up
Raj Bhavan assignments, has claimed credit for himself and Narendra Modi’s
reputation for busting what he has described as a “scam”, the Congress
president had earlier this month drawn attention to the health insurance
project and made a reference to the Prime Minister as “BFF” (best friend
forever) in the context of the Rafale deal and the mediclaim scheme.

Malik has levelled grave and sweeping allegations but has neither named
Reliance nor pinned specific charges on the company. Reliance General
Insurance has denied any wrongdoing. Trinity could not be contacted for
comment.》

This follows the claims by the state administration and the company that
the process of award of the contract was transparent and sound: <
https://m.greaterkashmir.com/news/business/govt-clarifies-fears-regarding-employee-mediclaim/295381.html>
and <
https://www.financialexpress.com/industry/won-jammu-and-kashmir-mediclaim-policy-contract-after-transparent-process-reliance-general/1340494/
>.

Having been confronted with allegations to the contrary: <
https://www.thequint.com/news/india/reliance-health-insurance-for-jammu-and-kashmir-government-employees
>.

Now, finally ...]

https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/reliance-deal-not-rafale-off/cid/1672647?fbclid=IwAR1W7-K1yx4EftR_1a1Hmjqh00ZHcxPYEf_-Fe_D1uCrSziaQlAY3-yezDk

Reliance deal (not Rafale) off
J&K governor scraps mediclaim scheme

By Muzaffar Raina and Vivek Nair in Mumbai

Published 26.10.18, 3:20 AMUpdated 26.10.18, 3:20 AM
4 mins read

Anil Ambani
Telegraph file picture

The Jammu and Kashmir governor has scrapped a group insurance contract
bagged by a firm in Anil Ambani’s Reliance group, declaring he had
“personally” concluded that the entire deal was “full of fraud”.

The disclosure not only renews focus on the common Reliance factor at a
time the Rafale scandal is boiling afresh, it also helps Rahul Gandhi claim
a significant scalp.

Although governor Satya Pal Malik, who was with the BJP before taking up
Raj Bhavan assignments, has claimed credit for himself and Narendra Modi’s
reputation for busting what he has described as a “scam”, the Congress
president had earlier this month drawn attention to the health insurance
project and made a reference to the Prime Minister as “BFF” (best friend
forever) in the context of the Rafale deal and the mediclaim scheme.

The Jammu and Kashmir project to provide health cover to lakhs of state
government employees has two aspects: the tender bagged by Reliance General
Insurance and the policy product designed by an intermediary called Trinity
Reinsurance. Governor Malik’s explosive comments suggest Trinity ran the
bidding process, too.

Malik has levelled grave and sweeping allegations but has neither named
Reliance nor pinned specific charges on the company. Reliance General
Insurance has denied any wrongdoing. Trinity could not be contacted for
comment.

The gist of the governor’s charges is as follows:

Trinity “was a front for some other company, which I will not name”.
Trinity, not the government, had invited the tenders to pick the insurance
company for the mediclaim scheme.
The bids were not displayed on the government’s website.
The tenders were opened on a holiday.
The tender amount was changed to suit a particular company.
More employees were added to the scheme to increase the amount (total
premium collected).
Entire deal “was full of fraud”.
Trinity was chosen in January 2018, when the PDP-BJP government was in
power. The Reliance firm was picked last month — by then the coalition had
collapsed and central rule had been declared — through the bidding process.

State government employees were up in arms against the contract, alleging
it was farmed out fraudulently. The issue snowballed after Rahul joined the
protest bandwagon.

“When your BFF (Best Friend Forever) is the PM, you can get the 1,30,000
Cr. Rafale deal, even without relevant experience. But wait. There’s more!
Apparently, 400,000 JK Govt staff will also be arm twisted into buying
health insurance ONLY from your company!” the Congress chief had tweeted on
October 6.

Around 3.5 lakh regular government employees are compulsorily covered under
the scheme. For pensioners, it is optional. The scheme is expected to cover
many people, including the family members of the employees, and hundreds of
crores of rupees are expected to be paid as premium.

The scheme covers each employee plus five members of his or her family for
coverage of Rs 6 lakh with a premium of Rs 8,777 per annum. For a
pensioner, the premium will be Rs 22,229.

Governor Malik’s revelations came during two rounds of interactions with
the media.

On Wednesday, Malik spoke to Zee News.

Question: The contract was given to a private company called Reliance of
Anil Ambani…. Questions have been raised against it. Have you investigated
it?

Malik: “I have not only investigated it but I have almost terminated it and
order will come in two days. I myself studied it. What was wrong with it
was that government had not invited any tender. There is some company
called Trinity which was a front for some other company, which I will not
name. (It) had invited tenders. Those bids were nowhere on our website, on
the government’s website. There again, the tenders that came, their amount,
was changed to suit a particular company. Tenders were opened on a holiday
and that tender was given to the company.

“I got to the root of it, and found who was involved in it and how much
money was involved. Another thing that was done to increase the amount
(premium), many more employees were added to it. Entire deal was full of
fraud so I talked to chief secretary and told him it cannot happen in my
presence. Those who were involved were called and everything became clear
that there was some wrongdoing. So we decided to cancel it.”

Question: Was there any pressure on you?

Malik: The beautiful thing is that we have such a Prime Minister that no
pressure came on me. Nobody can say in country that he can get things done
through Narendra Modi. So if nobody can reach him, I don’t accept pressure
from anybody else.”

On Thursday, Malik spoke to other reporters: “I personally went through the
file and when I reached the conclusion that there was something wrong in
it, I didn’t take a minute (and) I cancelled it yesterday. I can’t disclose
it (names of those involved) now but those who are involved will be
punished.”

A spokesperson for Reliance General Insurance said in Mumbai that the
insurer had won the mediclaim policy through an open, transparent and
competitive process.

“The tender process involved both technical and financial evaluation, and
Reliance General Insurance’s winning bid was almost 30 per cent lower than
the closest quote, resulting in the best commercial terms for the state
government employees. The policy has commenced on October 1, 2018. Reliance
General Insurance has not received any subsequent intimation with regard to
the policy till date,” the Reliance General Insurance spokesperson added.

On the day Rahul had criticised the deal, an official spokesperson of the
Jammu and Kashmir administration had defended the contract and said the
scheme has been “implemented after following all the required procedures in
a fair and most transparent manner”.

The spokesperson had said the bidding process was monitored by a team of
senior-most officers.

“In the first round of bidding only one bid was submitted by a public
sector undertaking and as the first round concluded with poor response, it
had to be terminated,” he had said.

“Thereafter, a pre-bid conference was organised, where both private and PSU
companies participated and the tender was reissued with minor changes in
technical parameters on their suggestion”.

The spokesperson said nine companies submitted bids, out of which five
qualified on the technical evaluation criteria.

“The financial bids of the qualified companies were opened and it emerged
that Reliance General Insurance Company with a quoted premium of Rs
8,776.84 was at L1, National Insurance Company with a quoted premium of Rs
11,918.00 at L2, ICICI Lombard with a quoted premium of Rs 17691.74 at L3,
Bajaj Allianz with a quoted premium of Rs 23476.10 at L4 and United India
Assurance Company with quoted premium of Rs 27225.00 at L5,” he said.

“The gap between L1 and other bidders was substantial and, therefore, there
was no question of lack of competition,” he said.


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