17. Badal Inc Punjab CM family
wealth knows no limit
http://www.firstpost.com/politics/badal-inc-punjab-cms-family-wealth-knows-no-limit-187252.html
This story was earlier
published on January 19, 2012 but is being
republished in light of the Moga tragedy.
It is a do-or-die election
for Punjab Chief Minister Prakash Singh Badal
and his son and Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir
Singh Badal. The past shows that electorates in
Punjab usually throw out incumbents. But Sukhbir
Singh Badal of the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal
(SAD) desperately requires to change this trend.
Reason: Like the Karunanidhi's family in Tamil
Nadu and YS Rajasekhara Reddy's family in Andhra
Pradesh, the Badals are under cloud for amassing
wealth disproportionate to their income.
Among other things, they
have been accused of using their political clout
to further their business interests, an
accusation which they aggressively deny.
The Akali Dal swept back
into power in March 2007. Since then, the aging
father, Prakash Singh Badal, has, more or less,
transferred all his shares in Orbit Resorts Pvt
Ltd to his son Sukhbir Singh Badal. Sukhbir
Singh's Orbit Resorts constructed a multi-crore
hotel building (Oberoi runs a hotel here) on a
nine-acre plot in Gurgaon, which is part of the
Delhi National Capital Region (NCR).
His father-in-law Satyajit
Singh Majithia launched Orbit Aviation Pvt Ltd,
in which Sukhbir's Orbit Resorts Pvt Ltd
acquired equity shares. Sukhbir also acquired
stakes in leading transport companies running
deluxe luxury buses, which were issued permits
by the Akali Dal government in Punjab. And
Sukhbir and his family acquired a news channel
and two entertainment channels.
All this has happened in
five years - between 2007 and 2012. Documents
available with Firstpost indicate that there
could be a conflict of interest in the Badals
running the government and their private
businesses.
Sukhbir Singh says he
resigned from the directorship of Orbit Resorts
in 2009. But his wife Harsimrat Kaur in managing
director, and there are other family members on
the board. He also denies having any links with
transport companies as of today, but
Firstpost has documents showing all the
transport companies as having something to do
with Orbit Resorts and only an independent
investigation can reveal their intricate
cross-connections.
Punjab's father-son chief
minister-deputy chief minister duo have been
accused of using their political clout to
further their business interests, an accusation
which they aggressively deny. AFP
First, a brief background
on Sukhbir Singh's business. Sukhbir Siingh's
Orbit Resorts got an impetus as far back as
1989, when the Haryana government allotted a
prime 17-acre industrial plot for a hotel in
Gurgaon. Sukhbir Singh was appointed director of
Orbit Resorts in 1988 when the Akali Dal was in
power in Punjab. Several eyebrows were raised
against the allotment given under the state's
tourism policy. To date, no Haryana government
has allotted such a huge plot on the pretext of
promoting tourism in Gurgaon.
The plot allotment was
cancelled once and remained entangled in legal
battles till 2000. The Comptroller and Auditor
General (CAG) had also flagged the issue in
2002, which had estimated losses at Rs 600 crore
to the state exchequer. After a lot of legal and
political drama, the Om Prakash Chautala
government restored the plot to Orbit Resorts to
Sukhbir Badal, who was then a Member of
Parliament.
In 2003, when the Congress
replaced the Akali Dal in Punjab, Prakash Singh
Badal was slapped with a case of
disproportionate assets. He was arrested for a
brief period but at that time he had shrugged it
off as 'vendetta' politics. His son and Deputy
Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal faces a
similar situation today.
He recently escaped action
when a Chandigarh-based lawyer, barrister Himmat
Singh Shergill, filed a public interest
litigation (PIL) with the Punjab and Haryana
High Court in October 2011, pleading that the
court should order a CBI enquiry into
allegations of corruption against Prakash and
Sukhbir Singh Badal. Himmat Singh's PIL was
based on a series of reports on transport that
had been published in a leading local English
daily, The Tribune.
The high court directed
Sukhbir and Prakash Singh to file their replies
to the PIL. The court, however, declined to
entertain the petition on the ground that the
petitioner should first approach the
investigating agency by filing an FIR instead of
seeking orders from the court directly by means
of a PIL. Barrister Shergill is in the process
of filing an FIR with the Punjab's vigilance
police.
The month of June 2007
(just three months after the Akali Dal came back
to power) seems to have been quite auspicious
for the Badals, as they opened several fronts
during this month. Orbit Resorts started the
construction of a multi-storeyed building on the
remaining nine-acre plot in Gurgaon. In less
than four years, the building was commissioned
to run as Oberoi Hotel, Gurgaon. A deluxe luxury
suite, 5136, on the fifth floor of the hotel
remains booked for Sukhbir Singh, whenever he
comes to Delhi NCR.
Sukhbir Singh says he
resigned from the directorship of Orbit Resorts
in 2009. But his wife Harsimrat Kaur in managing
director, and there are other family members on
the board. Naresh Sharma/Firstpost
In his reply to the high
court, however, Sukhbir Singh said that Orbit
Resorts obtained a loan of Rs 274 crore from
Punjab National Bank and Punjab and Sind Bank
for the construction of the hotel in June 2007.
He admits that the project cost was pegged at Rs
373 crore. But the rest of the expenses were met
through equity/internal profits/sale of assets,
he claimed.
In the same month (29 June,
2007), Sukhbir Singh's father-in-law Satyajit
Singh Majithia launched Orbit Aviation Pvt Ltd
for providing air ambulance and air taxi
services. Besides Satyajit, his son Gurmeher
Singh Majithia is the director of Orbit
Aviation. According to documents available
with Firstpost, other shareholders of the
company are Satyajit Singh Majithia's wife
Sukhmanjus Majithia and Sukhbir Singh Badal's
Orbit Resorts. Satyajit Singh Majithia was also
one of the directors in Orbit Resorts.
In the same year (2007),
Orbit Aviation acquired its first aircraft - a
brand new Cessna Citation CJ2+, a very popular
aircraft based at IGI Airport, New Delhi. In May
2011, it added another aircraft - a Super King
Air B-200 with Cargo Doors that can carry two
in-line life port stretcher systems.
Satyajit Singh Majithia, an
ex-commercial pilot, established Orbit Aviation
as a sister concern of Saraya Aviation Pvt Ltd,
incorporated in 1992. Satyajit is Chairman of
Saraya Aviation. According to Saraya Aviation's
website, they have three aircraft, including two
purchased by Orbit Aviation. This means Saraya
Aviation had been maintaining only one aircraft
for nearly 15 years since 1992. But, courtesy
Orbit Aviation, they added two more to the fleet
in the past five years.
In the transport sector,
Sukhbir Singh and his family are alleged to have
interests in three big transport companies
running deluxe luxury buses on Punjab government
permits. These companies are Orbit Transport,
Baaz Transport and Dabwali Transport.
On 19 September, 2007, the
Akali Dal government approved a new transport
policy. It opened the floodgates to the private
sector. The government issued permits for
running super deluxe buses to several private
companies.
Continues on the next page
Two months later, on 22
November 2007, the Akali Dal government relaxed
its taxation structure for the transport sector.
For ordinary buses, the tax was reduced from Rs
2.50 to Rs 2.25 per km per vehicle, which means
a 10 percent reduction in the tax. For super
deluxe buses, the tax was reduced from Rs 7.50
to 50 paise, that is, a 93 percent reduction in
taxes for the super deluxe buses.
Thus, the cut in taxes for
ordinary buses and super deluxe buses was not
uniform, and this resulted in heavy losses for
the government's transport companies - Punjab
Roadways and Pepsu Road Transport Corporation
(PRTC). A majority of government buses are
ordinary ones, while private transport companies
with super deluxe bus permits registered very
good profits.
The balance-sheets of
Dabwali Transport and Real Estate Pvt Ltd reveal
that during the 2007-2008 financial year, the
company's turnover was Rs 12.47 crore. There was
a near three-fold increase in the turnover (Rs
29.07 crore) by 2010-2011. After taxes, Dabwali
Transport's profit was Rs 1.17 crore in
2007-2008 and Rs 4.23 crore in 2010-2011.
Sukhbir Singh, in his reply
to the high court, said that he was neither an
MLA nor deputy CM in 2007, when the transport
policy was formed. He was appointed deputy CM
only in 2009. But his father Prakash Singh Badal
was the chief minister in 2007 and Sukhbir Singh
an office-bearer of the Akali Dal party.
Sukhbir Singh's Orbit
Resorts started the construction of a
multi-storeyed building in Gurgaon. In less than
four years, the building was commissioned to run
as Oberoi Hotel, Gurgaon.Naresh Sharma/Firstpost
Sukhbir Singh admitted that
he took over as managing director of Dabwali
Transport Company Ltd in 1990, though he is no
longer its director. He, however, remains a
majority shareholder in the company. "Right from
March 1994 onwards, the company has been
purchasing shares of Orbit Resorts Pvt Ltd as a
strategic investment,'' Sukhbir Singh said in
his court reply.
On Orbit Transporters,
Sukhbir Singh said it was started in 1990 and he
"continued intermittently a partner" in this
company. He is no longer a partner in this firm,
he claimed.
In Baaz Transporters Pvt
Ltd, Sukhbir Singh was a director since its
inception in 1988. Later it merged with Falcon
Properties Pvt Ltd. In 2009, when he took over
as deputy CM, he resigned from the directorship.
He holds shares in the company, but, Sukhbir
Singh claimed, Baaz Transporters or Falcon
Properties were never issued any transport
permit by the government.
Barrister Himmat Singh
Shergill, however, had a different story to
tell Firstpost: "Baaz Transporters are
defaulting in filing annual returns and
balance-sheets for the past three financial
years since 2007-2008. So we really don't know
their physical and financial structure. We don't
know how many buses Baaz owns!"
Also, a local TV news
channel - Day and Night - found out through a
Right to Information Act query that several
buses were plying illegally in the state. The
news channel obtained the list of persons who
were allotted bus permits. "We, at random,
visited three persons and found that they were
not even aware that super deluxe buses were
running in their names. They were so poor. Their
houses were dingy and they were supposed to be
owners of super deluxe luxury buses worth lakhs
of rupees,'' says the news channel's Managing
Editor Kanwar Sandhu.
According to documents, all
the three transport companies - Orbit, Baaz and
Dabwali - were shareholders in Orbit Resorts
along with Prakash Singh Badal, Sukhbir Singh
Badal, Harsimrat Kaur (Sukhbir's wife), Bikram
Singh Majithia (Sukhbir's brother-in-law),
Praneet Kaur Kairon (Sukhbir's sister), Satyajit
Singh Majithia and Sukhmanjus Majithia. But in
April 2010, Orbit Transporters' shares in Orbit
Resorts were transferred to Sukhbir Singh.
In his declaration while
filing election papers from the Jalalabad
assembly constituency in Ferozepur district,
Sukhbir Singh Badal showed his assets and income
as Rs 76 crore. His wife and Bhatinda MP
Harsimrat Kaur Badal's assets were worth Rs 3.90
crore, which mainly consisted of jewellery.
Sukhbir Singh had cash of Rs 5 lakh and deposits
of Rs 31 lakh, while his wife had only Rs 2.50
lakh cash. Sukhbir had bonds and debentures
worth Rs 24 crore and land in Punjab,
Chandigarh, Haryana and Rajasthan.
The directors' report of
Orbit Resorts for the year ending 31 March 2010
shows 44-year-old Harsimrat Kaur, a graduate
with eight years of experience, earning Rs 3.6
crore annually. The conflict of interest is
apparent between the political Badal family
which runs the Punjab government and the Badal
business interests.
Coming next: The Badals'
media interests