New Delhi, May (PTI) Special Secretary (Vigilance) Y V V J Rajshekhar, who was divested of his duties by the Delhi government, alleged that his office room was “searched” late Monday night and expressed apprehension that “sensitive” files related to the excise policy and the chief minister’s residence renovation might be destroyed or tampered with. Rajshekhar detailed his complaints in a report to the lieutenant governor’s office, joint secretary in the Ministry of Home Affairs and the additional commissioner of police of Delhi’s anti-corruption branch. In a statement, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government called him “a thoroughly corrupt officer” and questioned his interest in keeping some files with him despite an order being issued for withdrawal of work from him on May 13.
“Regarding his allegation that someone tried to break in his office at night, the government will get it thoroughly investigated whether it is true or not. If true, strict action will be taken,” it added. The AAP dispensation and a section of bureaucrats are engaged in a tussle since the government announced a major administrative reshuffle after the Supreme Court gave it control over the transfer and posting of officers.
He is also probing the demolition of a heritage monument by a former CEO of Delhi Jal Board to construct a sprawling bungalow for himself.
In a reply to his superiors on May 15, Rajshekhar had said he was being “prevented from performing his duties” and apprehended “serious threat and diversion of records” pertaining to sensitive matters like the excise policy and the chief minister’s residence renovation. He also requested that the matter be taken to the High Court for a stay.
In his latest report to Lieutenant Governor V K Saxena’s office, he said he has “serious apprehension that our rooms might have been bugged and there is every likelihood of breach of secrecy, tampering of records, fabrication of records, etc.” He claimed that his office room at the Delhi Secretariat was searched late Monday night.
After he received instructions from Bharadwaj on May 15, the officer said, he sent 76 files that were with him in the “Confidential” section to the Secretary (Vigilance) “without examining these 76 files, merely recording the instructions of the Hon’ble Minister where he directed the undersigned not examine the files”.
However, 12 files that were “more sensitive”, some of them pertaining to the excise policy and the renovation of the chief minister’s residence were not sent, but kept in the custody, he said. “It is not advisable to transfer or send the files either photocopies or otherwise to the Hon’ble Minister as per ‘principle of arm’s length’. We need to carefully examine before taking a view with reference to the verbal directions of the Hon’ble minister,” the report stated.
Rajshekhar said that he received a call from an officer around 9.14 PM on Monday informing him that officials have been summoned to open his room for collection of records. “The undersigned seriously objected to such call for taking away the records as per the alleged instructions of the Hon’ble Minister (Vigilance) at midnight and strongly objected not to indulge in such act.
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