The interrogation of Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy by the CBI
centred around the allotment of land to Vodarevu and Nizamapatnam Port
and Industrial Corridor (Vanpic) project as a quid pro quo benefit for
Nimmagadda Prasad for investing Rs. 350 crore in
Sakshi
daily.
As a battery of CBI sleuths grilled Mr. Jagan
on Vanpic, which has taken centre-stage in the ongoing probe after the
arrests of Mr. Prasad and Excise Minister Mopidevi Venkataramana Rao,
the Kadapa MP is said to have strongly defended the investments in
Sakshi
strictly on the ground that it was a business proposition.
While
details of the interrogation are not available, Mr. Jagan said in an
interview on Thursday that neither he nor Mr. Nimmagadda Prasad has
committed any wrong. “What mistake did Mr. Prasad commit? There is no
reason for him to be arrested by the CBI,” he said.
Vanpic issue
He
contended that it was the then Congress government that had given the
Vanpic project to Ras Al Khaima (RAK) which was not a private company
but a sovereign State in the United Arab Emirates.
“It
was Andhra Seaports Company that had first proposed Vanpic project in
1999-2000. But, the company withdrew and the then TDP government handed
it over to the Czech government,” he said.
An MoU was
also signed with the Czech government but the agreement was cancelled
and only then did RAK come into the picture. After RAK signed an MoU
with the AP government, Nimmagadda Prasad was appointed its local
partner, Mr. Jaganmohan Reddy claimed.
He said there
was no link between Mr. Prasad being the local partner of RAK and his
investments in his companies. While the agreement with Czech government
was cancelled in September 2007, Mr. Prasad invested money in August
2007. “The name of RAK did not crop up at that time,” he added.
The
YSR Congress leader said there were instances of the Chandrababu Naidu
government having favoured certain persons in respect of Krishnapatnam,
Gangavaram and Kakinada ports. Gangavaram project was given away to
Dubai government but the local partner was D. V. S. Raju. Similarly,
Krishnapatnam and Kakinada Ports also had foreign connections.
He said Mr. Prasad earned Rs. 600 crore by selling away his shares in Bharati Cements in which he invested Rs. 280 crores.
“He invested Rs. 350 crore in
Sakshi
media group in April 2010 – eight months after my father passed away. How can it be a quid pro quo arrangement,” he asked.
Referring to CBI's objections on valuation for his media group, Mr. Jaganmohan Reddy said
Eenadu
group's valuation was put at Rs. 6,700 crore where as its accumulated
losses on that day was put at Rs. 1,800 crore. “We came into the market
with 20 editions and high end technology. Is it wrong to give half that
valuation for our publication when our print order was 12.50 lakh,” he
said.
from Hindu
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