Explainer: What you need to know about the alleged ‘Yeddy diaries’
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Rohan
Venkataramakrishnan
Dated
March 23, 2019
Explainer:
What you need to know about the alleged ‘Yeddy diaries’
A
report in Caravan alleges that Income Tax officials have a copy of Karnataka
politican BS Yeddyurappa’s diaries detailing massive payoffs to top BJP
leaders.
Explainer:
What you need to know about the alleged ‘Yeddy diaries’
A
report in the Caravan set off a political storm on Friday, with both the
Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party holding press conferences to trade
charges. The story claimed that an Income Tax officer had written to Union
Minister Arun Jaitley asking whether the department should investigate a diary
that was allegedly kept by former Karnataka Chief Minister BS Yeddyurappa in
which he detailed huge payoffs made to senior BJP leaders and others.
Yeddyurappa
has denied the allegations and claims that the diary was fabricated. The
Congress, however, argued that there was enough information for an
investigation to be carried out. It said that the newly appointed Lokpal ought
to do it. The Central Board of Direct Taxation, which runs the Income Tax
department, also issued a statement, saying that it had indeed investigated the
diary and found nothing substantial in it.
With
elections around the corner, the charges will undoubtedly be used to score political
points especially against the BJP, which claims that it runs a clean operation
compared to the corruption taint that brought down the previous Congress-led
government. But there are a number of unanswered questions.
Here’s
a quick explainer.
What
does the Caravan story say?
The
story alleges that the Income Tax department is in possession of diaries
maintained by Yeddyurappa in which he lists out, in as many words, payoffs
allegedly made to various BJP leaders, including Union Ministers Arun Jaitley,
Rajnath Singh and Nitin Gadkari. According to the report, the diaries refer to
alleged payments made in 2009. The report also includes the scan of one
document, in Kannada, that has the specific numbers: Rs 1,000 crore to the
BJP’s Central Committee, Rs 150 crore each to Gadkari and Jaitley, Rs 250 crore
to judges and so on. According to Caravan, each page of the document is signed
by Yeddyurappa.
What
did Yeddyurappa say?
The
BJP leader made a short statement to the press claiming that the documents were
forged, and said that he would file a defamation case against the Congress for
false charges.
If
real, why would he keep a document like this?
The
story suggests that Yeddyurappa wrote these entries during the period when he
had broken away from the BJP. In 2011, after Karnataka’s anti-corruption
watchdog indicted him in a case involving alleged kickbacks, Yeddyurappa had to
step down as chief minister and was dismissed from the BJP as well. The article
mentions that local media reported on a turf war between Yeddyurappa and
Karnataka BJP leaders at the time, which may explain why Yeddyurappa had such a
document.
How
did the Income Tax office get it?
According
to the story, the Income Tax department found the diaries among papers that
were seized from the home of Congress leader DK Shivakumar in raids conducted
in 2017. Shivakumar was raided at the time he was attempting to keep Congress
MLAs together in the aftermath of a fractured verdict following state elections
in Karnataka and trying to prevent them from being poached by the BJP.
This
part of the story was later confirmed by the Central Board of Direct Taxation
in its release, which said during the raid on Shivakumar, “some loose papers
were given to the raiding party. They were a xerox copy of Karnataka
Legislative Assembly, Legislator’s Diary pages of 2009 with details of
numerical entries against some individual names.”
What
else do I need to know?
A
key aspect of the Caravan story is the allegation that a senior income tax
official wrote to Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, offering details about the
case and asking whether further investigations should be carried out. The
unsigned note allegedly includes some potentially incendiary details. At one
point, for example, it allegedly said that the IT department “protected the
interests of the BJP leaders. Since this matter is connected to the BJP leaders
of Karnataka and also in Delhi, no further investigation has been done till
date.” It also claimed that BJP national leaders had been attempting to use the
IT department to break the Congress-Janata Dal (Secular) government in
Karnataka.
It
asks whether the “original diary” should be procured and a case should be filed
for investigation by the Enforcement Directorate or another appropriate agency,
and says “legal opinion is sought”. The I-T department functions under the
Finance Ministry, which Jaitley heads. According to the Caravan report, Jaitley
– whose own name allegedly turns up in the diaries – did not reply and no
investigation was carried out.
How
has the government responded to this allegation?
Neither
the Central Board of Direct Taxation nor the Union Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad
in their statements about the issue mentioned the letter by the senior income
tax official.
The
CBDT statement, however, disputes the suggestion that no investigation was
carried out. Instead, it claims that the documents were a part of “loose
papers” that the raiding party found in Shivakumar’s house.
It
also mentions details about what happened afterwards:
The
department claims it questioned Shivakumar about the papers, to which he said
he received the papers since, as a politician, he procured information about
other politicians and parties.
When
asked why he did not take the papers to authorities, the CBDT claimed that
Shivakumar said, “As he did not know about the genuineness of the said loose
sheets, he did not inform the same to enforcement agencies.”
The
department claims it also questioned Yeddyurappa about the papers. The BJP
leader, according to the CBDT account, said he is not in the habit of keeping a
diary, and denied that it was his handwriting or signatures on the sheets.
“He
also provided a sample of his handwriting in order to verify the genuineness of
the said loose sheets,” it said.
The
department also said it sent the sheets to the Central Forensic Science
Laboratory in Hyderabad, but those could not be examined as they were not “in
original”, and Shivakumar did not give any original documents.
It
concludes:
“It
is clear that for a forensic analysis of the disputed writings to establish its
evidentiary value, originals of the same are required. All efforts have been
made by the Income Tax Office concerned to procure the originals of the
disputed writings. However, the details about the place and custody of the
original writings and, if the original writings exist, are not available. The
same loose sheets prima-facie appear to be of a doubtful nature and were given
by the person who was being raided for tax violations.”
What
now?
It
is unclear where this goes from here. The Central Board of Direct Taxation has
already claimed it made “every effort” to examine the document and found it to
be “of a doubtful nature”. And since the “original” diary is unlikely to turn
up, the matter is likely to remain at this stage, with allegations on one side
and a denial from the other. The case might even turn up in the Supreme Court,
but considering its decision on the Sahara Birla papers, which also involved
“loose papers”, it may not recommend further investigation.
A
few questions do come up:
Is
this “unsigned cover note” from a senior Income Tax official to Jaitley
genuine? Will the government, or the minister, confirm or deny having received
such a note?
Will
this unnamed Income Tax official speak up about the matter?
What
does the Income Tax department mean when it says “all efforts” were made to
procure the originals? What investigation did it actually carry out? Did it
seek to match the movement of money?
Why
did DK Shivakumar not take the papers to the authorities or the press? If the
Congress is convinced about the matter now, why was it unconvinced earlier?
What changed? (The Caravan story suggests Shivakumar did not, because his
“relationship with Yedyurappa was good”, according to the IT official’s note).
Link https://scroll.in/article/917515/explainer-what-you-need-to-know-about-the-alleged-yeddy-diaries
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