This Article is From May 31, 2016

Conspiracy, Says Sonia Gandhi After NDTV Reports On Robert Vadra Inquiry

Sonia Gandhi has dared the government to "conduct an inquiry" into the allegations against Robert Vadra

Highlights

  • Let government order probe if it has evidence: Sonia Gandhi
  • NDTV reported government inquiry against Robert Vadra
  • Mr Vadra's lawyers deny he proxy-owned London home
New Delhi: Congress chief Sonia Gandhi has dared the government to "conduct an investigation if you have proof" over an inquiry into whether her son-in-law, Robert Vadra had bought a benami house in London by an arms dealer who was raided last month.

NDTV broke the news yesterday that the Finance Ministry is determining whether Sanjay Bhandari, who is being investigated for financial crimes, bought the property in 2009 and provided proxy ownership for Mr Vadra, who is being investigated for controversial land deals in Haryana when the Congress governed the state. Mr Vadra's lawyers have said the report is completely without basis.

"They make these false allegations every day," Mrs Gandhi said.  "Let them hold an inquiry... the truth will then emerge", she said, adding this is part of the government's agenda to deliver a "Congress-mukt Bharat", a phrase coined by Prime Minister Narendra Modi against the opposition party.
 

Benami London home for Robert Vadra linked to arms dealer, suggests report accessed by NDTV (File photo)

The NDTV report highlighted that the government's inquiry is based on emails and other data recovered when Mr Bhandari's offices and homes were raided. NDTV cannot verify the authenticity of the emails, but the government report cites exchanges between Mr Vadra and his executive assistant, Manoj Arora, discussing payments and renovation for the London home. 

The report says their emails were sent to Sumit Chadda, a relative of Mr Bhandari based in London.  The house, bought in 2009 for Rs 19 crore, was sold a year later.

The Congress has defended Mr Vadra, alleging that he is being persecuted by the government which fabricates allegations against him, and then refuses to conclude inquiries as it benefits "from the noise".

The party has also said that the ruling BJP must explain the regular contact and close links between some of its own leaders and Mr Bhandari, who refused to comment on the NDTV report.
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