Illegal
Assets: Bangalore Court Removes Jayalalithaa as CM of Tamil Nadu
-Dr. Abdul Ruff Colachal
___________
Jayalalithaa
has gone back to jail. Of course Tamil Nadu will lose nothing by disowning and
discarding a leader who betrayed Tamil state and looted the Tamil resources for
her own sake while she is on oath to serve the people of Tamilnadu by all
means.
Jayalalithaa
has been deliberately insensitive to public complaints about
properties stolen by criminals and police apathy and atrocities.
__________
Indian politicians, bureaucrats, among others, boldly engage
themselves in bribery and other types of corruption operations because they are
damn sure they are safe under a corrupt regime promoting corruption as part of
so-called development. .
Very rarely that a political leader gets punishment in India but
by and large the corrupt system Nehru gave birth to still continues
without any problems and serious threats and politicians, various mafias and
corperates and bureaucrats thrive. Punishments are given only to select
leaders for their extra fittings.
Tamil Nadu’s DMK party leader Karunanidhi and ADMK leader
Jayalalithaa have been caught by law in their corrupt operations and have spent
time in jails.
Jayalalithaa has been convicted again in multi crore illegal
assets case in Bangalore court. In a major setback for Tamil Nadu CM J
Jayalalithaa, a special session court in Bangalore convicted her and three
others accused in Rs.66.65-crore disproportionate assets case giving the
AIDMK leader a four-year jail term.
Today on 27th September Tamil Nadu Chief
Minister J Jayalalithaa was convicted under prevention of corruption act
by a special court in Bangalore. Special Judge John Michael D’Cunha convicted the
66-year-old AIADMK Chief
in a case of owning assets disproportionate to her known sources of income
during 1991-96 when she was chief minister for the first time. The verdict was
delivered at a makeshit court in the Parappana Agrahara prison complex in the
presence of Jayalalithaa and the other accused. Jayalalithaa’s close aide
Sasikala Natarajan, her niece Ilavarasi and her nephew and the chief minister’s
disowned foster son Sudhakaran are also convicted.
After an 18-year court battle, special Judge John Michael Cunha
John Michael Cunha convicted 66-year old Jayalalithaa, who is general secretary
of the AIADMK. He held Jayalalithaa and three others – Sasikala and her
relatives V.N. Sudhakaran and J. Illavarasi guilty. Sasikala is the close aide
of Jayalalithaa. Pronouncing the order, the special Judge held Jayalalithaa
guilty of amassing wealth disproportionate to known sources of her income under
Sections 109 and 120 (b) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and 13 of the
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, said Special Public Prosecutor G. Bhavani
Singh. Her aide Sasikala and two others have also been convicted.
Jayalalithaa
slapped with Rs.100-crore fine. Jayalalithaa stepped down as Chief
Minister. Automatically, Jaya gets disqualified for six years. Jayalalithaa,
66, will now lose MLA’s post and will have to step down as Tamil Nadu Chief
Minister, while she stands disqualified from public office for next 6
years. She is likely to appoint a loyal party man as the chief minister
of Tamil Nadu.
This is the second time that Jayaalithaa has been convicted.
Earlier, when the court disqualified her to continue as chief minister of
Tamilnadu she handpicked her most loyal minister O Pannir Selvam who was
then a junior in the cabinet who upon assuming power at Madras Fort he
never took a decision without consulting Jayalalithaa- in fact,
he did exactly what jayaalaithaa asked him. There were occasions when CM
Pannirselvam left meetings in order to get orders from the Poes Garden,
Jayalalithaa residence in Chennai. .
Security has been beefed-up at the DMK headquarters and residences
of its senior leaders. On a request from DMK, security had been increased at
“Anna Arivalayam”, the headquarters of DMK, two residences of former Tamil Nadu
Chief Minister and DMK President M Karunanidhi and the residence of K
Anbazhagan, party’s General Secretary, police said. It was on Anbazhagan’s
petition that the case had been transferred to Bangalore by the Supreme Court
The verdict made the AIADMK party people
angry. Clashes broke out in Tamilnadu. News channels blocked, electricity cut,
stones pelted minutes before the Jayalalithaa verdict announced. Protest
against Subramanian Swamy in Chennai Buses burnt near
Ambattur, Kancheepuram, several injured. Jayalalithaa goes to Bangalore
jail. However, the next day, bus services, suspended in many parts of the
state, were being resumed in a phased manner though operations to Bangalore
were still not being taken up.
Rallying
behind beleaguered AIADMK supremo Jayalalithaa, the
party leaders and two of her allies said the Bangalore special
court verdict convicting her in the disproportionate assets case was not final
and expressed hope that she would emerge victorious. Meanwhile, scores of
AIADMK workers held a "hunger strike" at several locations in the
state protesting the verdict.
AIADMK MLAs
are likely to meet here today to propose a candidate for the Chief Minister's
post. Party sources said the meeting is likely to be held later in the day
and all the legislators have been asked to be present. Majority of the
ministers of the Jayalalithaa ministry and MLAs had been in Bangalore since
yesterday to know the outcome of the Special Court verdict.
Some of
the names of Jayalalithaa's cabinet ministers including O Panneerselvam, Natham
Viswanathan and V Senthil Balaji besides former Chief Secretary and Advisor
to Tamil Nadu government, Sheela Balakrishnan are
doing the rounds for the top post. However, Jayalalithaa could still spring a
surprise by possibly nominating a more not-so-known face.
Hoping for a major setback to the ruling party, opposition
parties including DMK, Vaiko’s MDMK and Ramadoss’s PMK have been loud enough to
reveal their changing stands. DMK and some other Dravidian parties like DMDK of
actor Vijayakanth are making efforts to unite against AIADMK. While the whole
state is abuzz with predictions on verdict, Jayalalithaa’s followers are not
worried. Prior to the judgment, hundreds of AIADMK leaders from different
districts have already made a beeline to Bangalore.
The asset case was filed by Subramanian Swamy in 1996 accusing
Jayalalithaa of amassing properties worth Rs 66 crore during her tenure as the
Chief Minister from 1991 to 1996. Earlier, she was arrested and jailed for some
days after DMK came to power in the 1996 Tamil Nadu Assembly polls.
In perhaps one of the longest legal battles involving a
political leader ever since the case was filed, the country has witnessed five
Lok Sabha elections and Tamil Nadu three Assembly polls.
The verdict, which was scheduled for September 20, was deferred
to September 27 as the Karnataka High Court had to issue a notification
regarding shifting of the court to facilitate Bangalore police to make security
arrangements for the Chief Minister. Jayalalithaa on September 15 had filed a
petition before the Special Court judge seeking security cover.
Platoons
of Karnataka State
Reserve Police, the city Armed Reserve and the Rapid Action Force were
stationed near the court, besides hundreds of police personnel, including those
in plain clothes. Keeping all options open, an exclusive helipad has also been
built within the prison complex in case Jayalalithaa, who enjoys ‘Z Plus’
security cover, decides to fly down there.
Amid palpable tension, the 65-year-old AIADMK chief set out from
her Poes Garden residence in Chennai in the morning towards the airport along
with her close aide Sasikala Natarajan, another accused in the case, besides Ilavarasi
and flew to Bangalore in a special aircraft, hoping to return with a win in the
court. .
Now Jayalalithaa ceases to be MLA and CM. Jaya was taken to a
special jail kept ready in Bangalore in same night.
The big question now is who will head the government in the
absence of Jayalalithaa. Again this is not the first time such a question has
cropped up. In 2001, Jayalalithaa had to step down as a chief minister
following a Supreme Court verdict which held that she cannot hold the office
after being convicted for criminal offences. However, she made O.
Panneerselvam, a minister in her government, as the chief minister.
Life
Born in Mysore on Feb 2, 1948, Jayalalithaa moved to Chennai
with her mother, who started acting in movies. Jayalalithaa studied at the
Bishop Cotton Girl’s High School in Bangalore and another Christian convent,
Church Park, in Chennai. A bright student, Jayalalithaa ventured into acting
and made her debut at the age of 16 in a Kannada movie. Her first Tamil movie
was the memorable “Vennira Aadai”. But it was the grand success of “Aayirathil
Oruvan” pairing with the legendary M.G. Ramachandran (MGR) that turned
Jayalalithaa into a leading light of Tamil movie world. She has paired
with almost all the leading Tamil heroes. She has acted in over 100 movies,
mostly in Tamil, Telugu and Kannada. However, her movie hero MGR is
responsible for her phenomenal rise in Tamil politics, becoming CM of Tamilnadu
where fanatics, like elsewhere in the country, talk about “outsider
interference”.
In fact, her mentor MGR himself was a Malayalee and he had
faced criticism form DMK for making big show in Tamilnadu But
he became the first ever film star turned CM in the world and also became
Bharatratna – a post offered by the ruling party to its favoured persons
who have helped the party.
A charismatic leader who is at home in Tamil, English and Hindi
(a rare quality in Tamil Nadu politics), Jayalalithaa has also sung many songs
and written several stories. But when she entered politics, few could have
predicted her meteoric rise. AIADMK founder-leader MGR made Jayalalithaa the
party’s propaganda secretary in the early 1980s. In 1984, she entered the Rajya
Sabha.
Jayalalithaa, who chose never to marry, was elected to the Tamil
Nadu assembly for the first time in 1989. Just two years later, she became the
chief minister, sweeping the election of 1991 held in the wake of former Prime
Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination. She lost her huge mandate within five
years amid corruption charges
During her first tenure (1991-1996) as the chief minister,
Jayalalithaa had announced that she would take just Re.1 as her
salary. The charge against her was that her asset was
around Rs.3 crore in 1991 and had grown to around Rs.66 crore between
1991-1996.
Illegality
The AIADMK was voted out in 1996 as it was perceived to be
corrupt. Incidentally, DMK MP T.M. Selvaganapathy lost his Rajya Sabha seat
this year after he was convicted in the cremation shed case by a CBI court. He
was the local administration minister in Jayalalithaa’s government when the
scam broke. He later switched sides to the DMK.
The court had directed Jayalalithaa and three other accused to
be present before it. Appearing before the court four times, Jayalalithaa has
answered 1,339 questions in closed door hearings during which she has
maintained that the case was “politically motivated” and “fabricated” at the
instance of her rival DMK.
This is not the first time in her political career that
Jayalalithaa has been convicted by a court. In 2000, a trial court sentenced
Jayalalithaa for three years and two years imprisonment in two cases.
The case, registered by the Tamil Nadu directorate of vigilance
and anti-corruption in 1997, states that Jayalalithaa and her three associates
– her former close friend V K Sasikala, Sasikala’s nephew V N Sudhakaran and
sister-in-law J Illavarasi – have acquired Rs 66.65 crore worth of assets by
corrupt means between 1991-96 during Jayalalithaa’s first tenure as CM.
The disproportionate assets case filed in 1996 by the then DMK
government led by M. Karunanidhi saw several twists and turns during its
course. When the AIADMK returned to power in 2001 several witnesses turned
hostile. On a petition filed by DMK leader K. Anbazhagan in the apex court, the
case was transferred to Bangalore from Chennai. Since then, the case
meandered, with several petitions filed by the defence and several
adjournments. Over 255 prosecution witnesses and over 95 defence witnesses have
been heard in the case. Jayalalithaa was also summoned by the trial court in
2011 and answered over 1,300 questions posed to her by the judge.
In 2002, Jayalalithaa again became the chief minister after
being acquitted by the Madras High Court. She was later elected from Andipatti
constituency. AIADMK leaders do not rule out re-run of such an arrangement.
Friends and foes are in awe of Jayalalithaa, who is the tallest Brahmin
politician in a state where anti-Brahminism is a part of political discourse.
Even her critics admit that Jayalalithaa is a fighter and has an iron grip over
her party.
The case filed at Madras High Court, was transferred to the
Bangalore Special Court by the Supreme Court in 2003 on a plea by DMK, which
claimed a fair trial cannot be held in Chennai as the Jayalalithaa-led AIADMK
government was in power. As the case moved, it has faced several twists and
turns following the filing of associated cases and petitions. Moreover, the
Special Court itself has witnessed five judges presiding over the case – AS
Pachapure, AT Munoli, BM Mallikarjunaiah, MS Balakrishna and finally John
Michael D’Cunha.
With her Z Plus security cover, Bangalore police is reportedly
deploying over 6,000 security personnel besides coordinating with the Tamil
Nadu police for security arrangements.
Senior BJP leader Subramanian Swamy, who had filed a petition in 1996 against
her, said Jayalalithaa, who had the best lawyers, “should know corruption
doesn’t pay”. “The judge is very upright. We are fighting against corruption,”
he said. CPI leader D. Raja said though that there was no immediate threat to
the government, it has to be seen who is going to be nominated the next leader.
Organisation Secretary of DMK T.K.S. Elangovan said “justice was delayed, not
denied”.
Earlier, there was media blackout in many parts of Tamil Nadu,
while there was a power cut in many parts of Chennai.
As the charges were being read against all the accused,
unprecedented security was put up around the DMK ministers’ residences in
Chennai. Jayalalithaa’s supporters burnt the posters of DMK leaders and Swamy.
The Tamil Nadu chief minister had filed two more defamation cases against Swamy
for his comments ridiculing her. Reports said her supporters clashed with cops
even as they were shown distributing sweets in anticipation of a win in the
favour of their leader.
The Bangalore city police have promulgated prohibitory orders
under Section 144 of CrPC as a precautionary measure ahead of the court
delivering its verdict. Police have also installed CCTV cameras at vantage
points in the area to check movement of people and vehicles towards the jail.
Lesson
The judgment against Jayalalithaa was delivered in Karnataka
state where she was born. Jayalalithaa quit the Chief Minister’s post.
Jayalalithaa had faced a similar situation in 2001, during her second tenure as
the Chief Minister, when Supreme Court ordered that she could not hold the post
as she was found guilty of some criminal offences including TANSI case, in
which she allegedly obtained property belonging to the state-owned agency.
It could be creating history in the annals of Tamil Nadu
politics. It denotes an end of a saga; of an almost 18-year long legal battle
of the actor-turned-politician Jayalalithaa. If Saturday’s judgment is going to
be crucial to Tamil Nadu politics as per experts’ predictions, it could totally
alter the political equations in the state. It will also decide the very fate
of AIADMK in the next assembly election.
The
guilty must be punished, and Jaya’s corrupt practices should serve as a lesson
for all corrupt politicians of India. She must realize that she now shares a
prison asset in Bangalore along with Muslim leader from Kerala Abdul Nasser
Madani whom her police had picked up from his home state, naming him a
terrorist for trying to defend the Muslims of Kerala from Hindutva/RSS forces,
while the judiciary found him innocent after nearly 10 years of police torture
in jails, including Coimbatore jailing Jayalalithaa’s tenure. Now Karnataka
Congress government has once again put him in a Bangalore jail, just for
sustaining the Hindu votes.
While
Jayalalithaa, who was all set to become premier of India but could not because
BJP won landslide, is undergoing punishment for her illegal assets and
corruption cases, Madani is the victim of conspiracy by Indian state
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