Probe initiated into alleged Rs 2,000 crore classroom scam: Shweta Singh Chauhan

New Delhi: A complaint was received alleging a Rs 2,000 crore scam involving former Delhi Ministers Manish Sisodia and Satyendar Jain, who are accused of inflating costs for constructing semi-permanent classrooms, Deputy Commissioner of Police-Anti Corruption Branch Shweta Singh Chauhan said on Wednesday. The cost per unit is estimated at Rs 24 lakh, significantly higher.

New Delhi: A complaint was received alleging a Rs 2,000 crore scam involving former Delhi Ministers Manish Sisodia and Satyendar Jain, who are accused of inflating costs for constructing semi-permanent classrooms, Deputy Commissioner of Police-Anti Corruption Branch Shweta Singh Chauhan said on Wednesday.

The cost per unit is estimated at Rs 24 lakh, significantly higher than the market rate at the time

According to Chauhan, the probe has revealed massive cost escalations and violations of procurement rules, with 34 contractors linked to the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP).

Chauhan while speaking with the reporters said, “We received a complaint against Manish Sisodia, former Deputy CM, and Satyendar Jain, former PWD Minister… the scam is of over Rs 2,000 crore. The classrooms were semi-permanent structures, and the cost estimate was around Rs 24,00,000 per classroom, which was far more than the prevalent market rate back then.”

“There was a considerable cost escalation by the time projects were completed. The allegations are that the prevalent market rate by then was Rs five lakhs to complete a classroom structure,” she added.

Earlier in the day, the Anti-Corruption Branch (ACB) of the Government of National Capital Territory of Delhi (GNCTD) registered a case against Sisodia and Jain over allegations of a Rs 2,000 crore scam linked to the construction of classrooms and school buildings at exorbitant rates.

The complaint was filed by BJP Delhi spokesperson Harish Khurana, BJP MLA Kapil Mishra, and Neelkanth Bakshi of the BJP’s Media Relations Department. The complaint alleged irregularities in the construction of approximately 12,748 classrooms at a reported expenditure of Rs 2,892 crore. The cost per classroom, as per the awarded tenders, stood at around Rs 24.86 lakh, even though similar structures could be built in Delhi for approximately Rs five lakh, they claimed.

It has also been alleged that the project was handed over to 34 contractors, most of whom were allegedly affiliated with the AAP.

According to ACB chief Madhur Verma, during verification, it was found that the Expenditure Finance Committee (EFC), in its meetings during the financial year 2015-16, had decided the project should be completed by June 2016 within the sanctioned cost, without any scope for future cost escalations.

However, despite those directives, not a single project was completed within the stipulated timeframe, and significant cost deviations were observed.

The enquiry revealed that a report by the Chief Technical Examiner (CTE) of the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) in this matter was issued on February 17, 2020, with the approval of the competent authority, but was allegedly withheld for nearly three years.