Enforcement Directorate to question Antony, Kesri
George Iype in New Delhi
The Enforcement Directorate plans to question Congress president
Sitaram Kesri and senior party leader A K Antony in connection with
foreign donations worth Rs 37.5 million that the party received between 1992 and 1995.
The ED, under instructions from the federal home ministry, has issued a
show-cause notice to the Congress for alleged violations of
the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act. It asked the party to reveal the
names of the foreign donors who contributed Rs 37.5 million to Congress coffers.
Documents in possession with the ED reveal that the Congress received
foreign donations worth Rs 37.5 million from London's Barclays Bank,
the Singapore branch of Indian Bank and the Jakarta branch of the Hong Kong and
Shanghai Banking Corporation as well as three Singapore-based
companies, Decor, Dominion and Diera.
The Congress has claimed it does not know the identity of the donors
and says the party has a tradition of receiving such donations
from non-resident Indians.
The ED has threatened to prosecute Congress leaders and
forfeit the amount if the party does not respond to
a questionnaire it has sent present treasurer Ahmed Patel.
The ED has asked if Decor, Dominion and Diera are foreign
firms or whether they belong to NRIs. If these companies
are owned by NRIs, the agency wants their names and
the reasons for the donations.
ED officials said it has a very strong case against the Congress as the
FCRA prohibits political parties from getting
foreign funds from any sources other than NRIs.
"We are not satisfied with the Congress's explanations, therefore,
we will certainly question both Kesri and Antony," a senior ED official told Rediff On The NeT.
Under FCRA, those responsible for receiving and
depositing the funds are liable to prosecution, can be fined and/or sentenced to
prison for up to five years.
Kesri was the Congress treasurer when the party received the
controversial payments in the name of the 'President, All India
Congress Committee,' then former prime minister P V Narasimha Rao.
But in 1995, when Kesri went abroad for medical treatment, it was Antony --
the acting party treasurer -- who received and deposited five of these cheques
amounting to Rs 27.5 million in the Union Bank of India's New Delhi Branch.
Speaking to Rediff On The NeT from Thiruvananthapuram, Antony said he
had accepted these cheques as the Congress had a tradition of receiving such foreign
donations. "I prepared the receipts of the drafts and cheques in the
name of the banks as the donors's names were not mentioned in them," he
said.
Antony says he is ready to place all the facts about the foreign funds before the enforcement
directorate and other agencies. "I have done nothing wrong," says the former Kerala chief minister who has a reputation for probity.
Congress sources said the party leadership is preparing a detailed
explanation for the ED and the home ministry, claiming that the
foreign drafts came from NRIs who preferred that their identities not be revealed.
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