Advertisment

PM to make statement in Parliament today

author-image
CIOL Bureau
Updated On
New Update

NEW DELHI, INDIA:  Following the exit of scam-hit telecom minister A.Raja on Sunday night, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is expected to make a detailed statement in Parliament today, referring to Raja's decision to resign from the cabinet. Both houses of parliament were disrupted last week following the controversy over 2G.

Advertisment

Following the controversy both the government and Raja were under pressure from the Opposition. Though the Congress had earlier asked UPA partner DMK to ask Raja to quit, the party was apparantly hesitant to take any hasty decisions. But by Sunday evening, the scene changed and DMK decided to bow to the demand, before the Supreme Court heres the case today.

The Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) has reportedly said in its report that the 2G spectrum allocations caused a loss of Rs1.76 lakh crore to the exchequer.

The controversy dates back to 2008, when nine telecom companies were issued scarce radio frequencies for offering 2G mobile phone services at a price of Rs.1,658 crore (less than $350 million) for a pan-India operation.

Advertisment

The opposition, based on the price which the exchequer got for the allotment of airwaves for 3G telecom services, says the 2G spectrum allotment resulted in a loss of billions of dollars to the exchequer.

Despite the controversy, both the DMK and Raja had insisted for about a week that there was no question of Raja quitting the cabinet because they said he had committed no wrong.

But a disbelieving opposition continued to breathe fire, paralysing both houses of parliament in the process.

Advertisment

The story took a dramatic turn on Friday when AIADMK leader J. Jayalalithaa offered her party's support to the Congress-led government if it sacked Raja and the DMK walked out in the process.

Although the Congress rejected the offer, informed sources said that the development put enormous pressure on the DMK and Karunanidhi.

The Prime Minister and Congress president Sonia Gandhi, who also heads the ruling United Progressive Alliance, had an unscheduled meeting Sunday to discuss the Raja issue.

Advertisment

As the day progressed, Karunanidhi, who enjoys a close rapport with Gandhi, agreed that Raja had to go.

Raja then flew from Chennai to New Delhi, sparking speculation that he was on his way out. In Chennai, the DMK put out a brief statement stating tht Raja had been asked to quit so as to allow parliament to resume its democratic functioning.

The statement added that even though Raja had only pursued a communications policy unveiled in 1999, he had become the target of the opposition over the 2G spectrum allocation.

Advertisment

Even as Raja met the Prime Minister, Congress spokesperson Jayanti Natarajan admitted that he had quit.

The development came three days after Speaker Meira Kumar adjourned the Lok Sabha Thursday for the rest of the week after the opposition protests crippled the house.

According to top Congress sources, matters came to a head when the Supreme Court asked the solicitor general last month as to why the prime minister had not responded to the representation made by the opposition to sanction proceedings against Raja.

Advertisment

The government was even forced last year to order a probe into the issue by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), which in its initial report said the 2G spectrum was awarded on a first-come-first-served basis at the 2001 rates without any competitive bidding.

The opposition even said aid a new player like Swan Telecom, which bought licences for 13 circles with the necessary spectrum for $340 million, sold a 45 percent stake soon after to the UAE's Etisalat for $900 million.

This made its book value swell to $2 billion without having a single subscriber.

Advertisment

Similarly, realty major Unitech paid just $365 million as licence fee, but sold a 60-percent stake to Norway's Telenor for $1.36 billion later, taking its valuation to nearly $2 billion, again without a single subscriber and a non-existant network.

In sharp contrast, the 3G spectrum auction that concluded in May secured the exchequer a whopping Rs.67,718.95 crore — an issue that made the opposition raise its pitch against the manner in which the airwaves were allotted earlier.

(With inputs from IANS)

tech-news