This Article is From Dec 03, 2010

Fresh evidence against Chief Vigilance Commissioner PJ Thomas

Thiruvananthapuram: There are reports that the Central Vigilance Commissioner (CVC) PJ Thomas may quit ahead of a Supreme Court hearing on Monday that challenges his appointment.

The government has been trying to project that Thomas's involvement in the Kerala Palmolein import scam of 1992 is only political but documents with NDTV show that the defence the CVC presented in the case is far from water tight. (Read: Will Central Vigilance Commissioner Thomas resign?)

The documents show that Thomas, as Kerala Food Secretary in 1991, wrote to the Centre seeking permission for direct import of 15,000 tonnes of Palmolein, nine days before the Cabinet actually took the decision.

According to the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of India, the deal caused a loss of 2.8 crore rupees to the exchequer.

"I was merely implementing the Cabinet decision," is what Thomas had to say. But the defence has now fallen flat.

The Centre had been defending Thomas as "an outstanding civil servant."

But in 1995, the Congress-led government in Kerala, while tabling the CAG report in the Assembly, said that Thomas' letter to the Centre dated November 18, 1991, was the basis of the murky Palmolein import deal.

It is then ironic that the very same Congress appointed him CVC 10 years later despite huge protests from the Opposition.
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