This Article is From Jun 04, 2016

Eknath Khadse Gives BJP What It Sought, Resigns As Maharashtra Minister

Eknath Khadse faces charges of corruption in a land deal and allegations of having receieved several calls from gangster Dawood Ibrahim.

Highlights

  • Eknath Khadse resigns from post of revenue minister
  • Khadse named in 2 scandals- illicit land deal, alleged calls from Dawood
  • Maharashtra CM had briefed PM Modi, Amit Shah on Khadse
Mumbai: Eknath Khadse, the most senior minister in the Maharashtra government, has resigned amid twin scandals over an illicit land deal and his cellphone allegedly appearing in the call records of most-wanted gangster Dawood Ibrahim.

Mr Khadse's resignation came after Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis met Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Delhi late on Thursday night, hours after he gave a report to BJP chief Amit Shah on the controversy.

"I have submitted a factual report to Amit Shah on Khadse. The party will take necessary action," said Mr Fadnavis, who also briefed the Prime Minister on preliminary findings on the charges that Mr Khadse faces, sources said.

Amit Shah had sought the Khadse report from Mr Fadnavis in keeping with what the BJP stresses as its "zero-tolerance for corruption" policy. Sources indicated that the party is likely to take action against Mr Khadse, though only after legislative council elections to be held in the state on June 10, as it wants to avoid dissent from the minister's loyalists.
 

Eknath Khadse held the revenue minister's post in the Maharashtra government.

Sources had said the "minimum action" that Mr Khadse faced was losing his revenue portfolio.

Hours after meeting Mr Khadse, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis said that he has accepted the resignation and forwarded it to the Governor. The Maharashtra Chief Minister also tweeted that a retired judge will probe the allegation against Eknath Khadse.

The BJP, sources had said, feels that the allegations - raised first by a hacker and then the Aam Aadmi Party - of Mr Khadse being phoned last year by Dawood Ibrahim, who lives in Pakistan, are not substantial.

The bigger concern is the sale of government-owned land in April to Mr Khadse's wife and son-in-law for about four crores, when the market value of the plot is reportedly 30 crores. Mr Khadse has said the land was not owned by the government, that he bought it from a private party, and that he paid the stamp duty or tax on the market value of the plot which he says proves that the deal was above-board.

Maharashtra's Anti-Terror squad is investigating the alleged calls to the minister from Dawood Ibrahim. Mr Khadse has denied any links to Dawood Ibrahim.

Mr Khadse's resignation had been demanded not just by the opposition Congress but also a senior leader of the Shiv Sena, the BJP's ally.
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