Questions Raised in RTI Application

Annexure 1

 

– If the Finance Ministry/Central Board of Direct Taxes/Directorate

of Criminal Investigation possesses a list of Indian citizens who are

account holders of HSBC Geneva?

 

– According to the information held by the Finance Ministry/Central

Board of Direct Taxes/Directorate of Criminal Investigation, which

are the present Members of Parliament and former Members of

Parliament who were found to be account holders of HSBC Geneva?

 

– According to the information held by the Finance Ministry/Central

Board of Direct Taxes/Directorate of Criminal Investigation, what is

the list of persons who have more than Rs.50 crore in Bank deposits in

HSBC Geneva?

 

– What are the names of the individuals account holders who have been

subjected to questioning/Search & Survey operations by the Income

Tax Department in conjunction with the possession of illegal bank

accounts in HSBC Geneva?

 

– Has there been any recovery made by the Income Tax Department from

these HSBC Geneva account holders of Indian origin?

 

– What is the period of time for which Indian citizens who were account

holders in HSBC Geneva maintained their accounts?

 
Varun Tweets on Sharmila - Call for 'Respect and Sympathy'

varun-gandhi

The Telegraph
New Delhi
September 21, 2011

Pilibhit MP and BJP national secretary Varun Gandhi yesterday became the first mainstream politician to reach out a hand of sympathy and a measure of respect towards Irom Sharmila, the crusader from Manipur.

In a tweet posted on his account yesterday, Rahul Gandhi’s cousin said, “The tragedy of Irom Sharmila’s 11-year-long fast being ignored by the Centre reflects the greater tragedy of the national neglect of the Northeast.”

Varun proposed that the Centre should send a parliamentary delegation to call on Sharmila in Imphal. “I would like to be part of a parliamentary delegation that shows due respect to Sharmila’s struggle by calling upon her, to understand the issue and re-examine public solutions.”

Sharmila has been fasting since 2000 demanding the repeal of the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act, 1958.

Varun’s suggestion is apparently a personal one, because in the past, the BJP had said it was against abrogation of the act.

In another tweet, Varun, who is positioning himself as the BJP’s civil society face, lamented that the probe into RTI activist Shehla Masood’s murder in Bhopal had hit a wall. “One month after, no leads, no motives, no arrests. Of what use is a CBI probe? No justice for RTI activists in life or death.”

In response to a comment, he said he agreed that the police’s role in RTI murder cases and particularly Shehla’s had been “disappointing, even suspicious”. The police, in this instance, happen to be from Madhya Pradesh, a BJP-ruled state.

 
Varun Gandhi Following Narendra Modi's Footsteps

varun-gandhi

Mail Today
New Delhi
September 21, 2011

It seems to be the season of makeovers in the BJP. Varun Gandhi is now following the example of the other Hindutva icon, Narendra Modi, in trying to repackage himself as a new-age statesman for wider consumption.

Modi, of course, is playing for higher stakes with his fast and address to the nation at Ahmedabad. His younger colleague is not lacking in ambition, but hasn't reached the stage of aspiring for the Prime Minister's job, at least not yet.

The BJP's Varun has set his eyes on the Uttar Pradesh assembly elections, where he wants to play a pivotal role. The idea is to emerge on the national stage as a widely accepted leader through the timetested heartland of UP.

For the purpose, Varun has to rid himself of the natural branding of his politics after the obnoxious spiel he delivered against Muslims during the 2009 elections. Though he has officially claimed he never uttered the "If you raise your hand on any Hindu, I swear by the Gita that I will cut off that hand" speech, he clearly realises it is not going to take him far.

So, while Modi has been trying to metamorphose from being the Hindu Hriday Samrat to the CEO of Gujarat, Varun's trip is to get on to the Anna Hazare bandwagon and emerge as a new-age activist against corruption and social evils. For the purpose, he has been using his Twitter account to make statements on all contemporary political issues.

His first step was inviting Hazare to use his official residence as a venue for his fast. He then marked his presence at the Ramlila Grounds, where Hazare was fasting the previous month, and sat closed-eyed in the meditation pose, for the cameras.

The next step was taking on all political parties, including his own, for not demanding action against Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL). Only CPM has officially demanded action against RIL for malpractices such as inflation of capital costs to claim a much higher share of the profit petroleum and retaining the entire 7,645-sq-km exploration area in violation of the contract. Varun went on the front foot on this. "CAG indicts Reliance. Clear violation of contract terms. Government and Opposition both silent.

Wonder why?" he tweeted. He went on to share details of where the CAG had found fault with RIL: "(a) Eliminated competition in contracts, (b) Awarded contracts at unreasonable rates, (c) Directly notified oil and gas discoveries without informing government."

On Tuesday, Varun played another shot in his makeover game. He tweeted, expressing solidarity with Manipur's Irom Sharmila. The BJP, incidentally, is not in favour of withdrawing the Armed Forces Special Powers Act, which is what Sharmila's fast is aimed at achieving.

"The tragedy of Irom Sharmila's 11-year-long fast being ignored by the Centre. It reflects the greater tragedy of the national neglect of the North-East. I would like to be part of a parliamentary delegation that shows due respect to Sharmila's struggle by calling upon her," Varun tweeted.

Clearly, he is throwing in his lot with the civil society in the hope of recasting himself as an activistpolitician.

But public images are, at least in parts, rooted in the real persona of politicos. Unless this reflects a real inner quest, it's unlikely to achieve the desired results.

Varun just has to ask BJP veteran L.K. Advani about his experiments with Muhhamad Ali Jinnah's secularism to discover the truth about attempted makeovers and their impact on people's perceptions.

 
Issue of RTI activists' murders will be raised in LS: Varun Gandhi

varun-gandhi

The Indian Express
New Delhi
September 3, 2011

Condemning the killing of more than a dozen RTI activists in the country over the last two years, local BJP MP Varun Gandhi said he would raise the issue in the Lok Sabha soon.

"In the past two years, as many as 13 RTI activists have been murdered in the country and this issue will be raised in the Lok Sabha soon," Varun Gandhi told reporters here on Friday night.

Varun, who is also BJP's national secretary, said all the RTI activists who were killed were not raising national issues but local ones and it seemed that the murders had taken place with the backing of police.

Lamenting that the country was lagging behind because of corruption, Varun pledged support to activist Anna Hazare, saying the Gandhian's campaign was "to save the country."

"The support to Anna Hazare has proved that people are not ready to bow down before anyone," he said.

Earlier addressing farmers at a meeting, Varun assured them that he would try his best to re-open Majhola sugar mill here and would bear the cost of the legal battle, if required.

The mill ran for 37 days in 2008-2009, seven days in 2009-2010 and has remained non-functional in 2010-2011.

 
Shri Varun Gandhi's Speech in Parliament on the Issue of Corruption and the Lokpal Bill
 
Varun Gandhi to introduce Jan Lokpal Bill in LS

varun-gandhi

CNN IBN
New Delhi
August 19, 2011

BJP leader Varun Gandhi is expected to introduce Team Anna's draft Jan Lokpal Bill in the Lok Sabha next week. This will be as a Private Members' Bill. He said the Jan Lokpal Bill isn't perfect but is still better than the government's version. Gandhi spoke exclusively to CNN-IBN and said he believes the Prime Minister should be part of the Jan Lokpal Bill.

CNN-IBN: Why do want to move the Jan Lokpal Bill as a Private Members' Bill?

Varun Gandhi: Look, I feel that there are millions of people, millions of Indians who are agitating today on the roads. Why is this? This is because people recognise that this is a defining moment in Indian political history. Years from now when we look back at this stage, you know we are going to judge ourselves by where we stood on this very war on corruption. So as an elected representative, I wanted to use whatever little power I had to push this piece of legislation forward which I recognise is not an entirely perfect piece of legislation. It may have certain faults but it is a lot, a lot better in creating systems that will make powerful people accountable than the Government Lokpal Bill. And I don't see this tussle between Anna Hazare's and his people and the government as being significant frankly this movement which is a subaltern movement which has risen from the ground independent of any political outfit is a great comment on the entire political class of this country, not just the Congress or the government. And all of us need to introspect on where we have gone wrong and where systems have not worked. And we need to move forward and correct things. And I see this as being a major point in course correction for the nation.

CNN-IBN: You are aware of the all-party meeting where your party was represented. There are disagreements even within the BJP and of the BJP of the Jan Lokpal Bill. Now you standing for a Jan Lokpal Bill, should that be read as a clash between you and your party? And the fact that you are disagreeing with your own party for certain issues?

Varun Gandhi: See, as an Indian and as a person who introspects and is a thinking person, I realise that this is an issue which is beyond the ambit of merely politics or political parties. This is a silent revolution except now it's not-so-silent. And I realise that in time to come, all of us need to understand that this is for our benefit. This is for nation's future. Future generations will judge us by how we acted now. I recognise that the BJP and rather all Opposition parties as well have certain problems with this and I said to you earlier that I don't see this as an entirely perfect piece of legislation. But it is lot better than anything that has come about before. Now what I am saying is should we wait another 20 years for a perfect piece of legislation. No we should act now. And as a young person when I meet other young people they tell me, look why are more members of Parliament, why are more politicians not speaking for this because ultimately this is a Bill against corruption. It is not a Bill against government, you know.

CNN-IBN: The parliamentary procedure as a Private Member Bill needs to be adopted, it needs to be debated. Will you be disappointed if it does not become part of the parliamentary procedure and the government does not discuss or accept?

Varun Gandhi: I think that if there is one lesson we can learn from the Gandhian policies and the politics of Anna Hazare. It is that if you don't get your way at first you must persevere in an honest manner and just go at it. So if I don't get it today, I will put it up next week and the week after that and the week after that and sometime I will get it.

CNN-IBN: And finally, the most tricky issue is that of the inclusion of the Prime Minister. Your party seems to be having certain reservations about it just as obviously as the government has. What's your personal view?

Varun Gandhi: Look, my personal view is that the Prime Minister is a symbol of the executive. So if the executive can be held accountable for decisions it makes then why can't the symbol of that executive, the leader of that executive, face of that executive be held accountable?

CNN-IBN: Thank you so much for speaking to CNN-IBN.

Varun Gandhi: Thank you.

 
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