For years, they had hogged the spotlight for the right reasons. Now
they are making the headlines for the wrong reasons. The cricketing
heroes of the country have been under an inky dark cloud for some time
now thanks to the match fixing scandal. And the income tax raids
carried out with timing and precision in various cities of the country
on Thursday have only tightened the noose around their necks that much
more.
The raids were always on the cards. In fact, the general consensus is
that the operation was conducted a bit too late. All the same, the
operation clearly took everyone involved by surprise - except the
income tax officials of course for it was obviously a well planned
operation. Maybe even the delay was deliberately done to throw the
cricketers, officials and bookies off guard. It was certainly a major
nation wide swoop and the searches, in the words of one experienced IT
official were the ``biggest operation I have ever been associated
with.'' Thirty six teams with an average of ten officials are said to
be involved in the operation. They had to be extra careful for the
players and the bookies had been expecting a raid sooner or later.
Because of the delay, it was feared that the raids might not yield any
concrete results. But the whole operation was done in such a coordinated manner that from all accounts, a lot of relevant documents
have been recovered while in some cases bank accounts have been
sealed.
In Ahmedabad, for example, the officials raided the apartment and
office of Ahmedabad-based cricket bookie Hiren Hathi believed to the
``key operations man'' for several cricketers. Unofficial sources said
unaccounted income worth Rs 8.3 crore and several documents were
seized from Hathi's residence.
According to IT sources, officials confiscated several incriminating
documents including a bookies diary which has detailed entries of
money transactions made to and by prominent cricketers and
businessmen. Officials have also sealed at least one bank locker
belonging to Hathi.
In New Delhi, IT officials raiding Ajay Jadeja's residence, stumbled
across proof that one house in a village, south of the capital, could
also be searched for more evidence. The officials immediately rushed
to a new house in Khirki village and discovered that they had landed
at a property belonging to a prominent political leader.
Also at another place in the capital, while conducting the
investigations, officials managed to obtain a list of four more
persons involved in the match fixing scandal which might amount to
over Rs thirty thousand crores annually.
Confirming the success of the nation wide operations, the Union
Minister of State for Finance Dhananjaya Kumar told a press conference
in Bangalore that "incriminating" documents were seized and 16 bank
lockers of "suspected persons" sealed during the countrywide
simultaneous raid in the wake of match-fixing and telecast rights
allotment scandals. He said ``the search is still going on and it may
continue till tomorrow.''
Director General (Investigation) of Income Tax SC Parija said "raids,
which are continuing still, have been successful as the raiding
parties have found documents pertaining to properties, investments,
large scale expensive gifts and unexplained expenditures. It may take
some days however for the documents to be analysed.
The entire operation, as I said, was planned and well coordinated. In
the nation-wide swoop, IT and CBI officials raided over 85 premises of
leading cricketers, officials and bookies. Simultaneous raids were
conducted at 37 places in Delhi, five in Mumbai, three each in
Ahmedabad and Patiala, two in Jaipur and a few others in Hyderabad,
Calcutta and Bangalore. according to IT sources.
Symbolising the effectiveness of the operation was the fact that
places associated with Kapil Dev and Navjot Sidhu were simultaneously
raided by officials in Chandigarh and Patiala. CBI sleuths are also
said to have accompanied the IT officials during the raids, which were
obviously conducted in pursuance of the ongoing CBI probe into the
match-fixing scandal. In Chandigarh, the homes of Kapil Dev's older
brothers Ramesh Nikhanj and Bhushan Nikhanj, and the jointly owned
family saw-mill located in the local timber market, were sealed by the
IT officials, who entered the premises at sunrise.
A simultaneous raid was also carried out on the Nikhanj family's once
highly popular Hotel Kapil in Sector 35 in Chandigarh. Patrons were
denied access to the Sixer Bar and Oval Restaurant by police guards
who were posted outside the property throughout the day.
Meanwhile in Patiala, IT officers conducted similar raids on two
houses and business premises. These include Sidhu's Yadavindra Colony
home, his father-in-law's residence in Century Enclave, and, a
business establishment. Reporters and photographers were strictly
denied entry to any of the premises where the raids were in progress.
In one instance in Patiala, officers conducting the raids forcibly
detained a TV camera crew until they agreed to black out some shots
showing faces of the officials participating in the raid.
IT officials remained tight-lipped about what was found but sources
indicated that in each case, assets were being evaluated against
statements made in IT returns during the past ten years. Security
throughout the operations was heavy. In both Chandigarh and Patiala,
for example, the IT raiding parties were accompanied by heavily-armed
Punjab police personnel.
In the nation-wide operations, IT and CBI officials raided over 85
premises of leading cricketers, officials and bookies. Simultaneous
raids were conducted at 37 places in Delhi, five in Mumbai, three each
in Ahmedabad and Patiala, two in Jaipur and a few others in Hyderabad,
Calcutta and Bangalore.