Bofors Exposure

1
Who will probe first family’s billions? When it comes to the topic of funny money stashed in foreign banks, why has the Congress party observed a studied silence over the years, almost always ignoring charges levelled against the Gandhi family? M rs Antonia Maino (aka Sonia) Gandhi has finally broken her silence on the Indian slush money abroad. She told her party workers in Mangalore on April 27, 2009 that "the Congress was taking steps to address the issue of untaxed Indian money in Swiss banks". The delayed response of the first family of the Congress party, troubled by the issue from the word go, is understandable. But, the Swiss mon- ey has already become an electoral issue. That is what has finally forced the family to speak so that the party is not any further seen as being in denial and cynical about the Indian slush funds abroad. It is the family's silence, and the party's denial, that turned the issue into an election agenda. Shorn of the allegations normal in election time, all that L K Advani had said on March 29 was this: 'Mr Prime Minister, vigor- ously take up the issue of Swiss type secret banking and tax havens in the G20 meeting of April 2'. Had the PM told Advani that that was precisely what he was intending to do, that would have been the end of the BJP effort to make an issue of it. A Con- gress party, unburdened by its first family's anxieties, would have done precisely that, particularly when elec- tions are round the corner. But neither the PM nor the party officials would dare do that. Why? Read on for the un- derlying drives. The first family has other, perhaps bigger, reasons to worry, apart from about the Bofors slush money. Two more stunning exposures — but not as well-known as the Bofors scam — make the first family a target for in- vestigation on slush money. Now on to the heart of the story which has three limbs. FIRST: $2.2 BILLIONS IN RAJIV'S SECRET ACCOUNTS, SAYS SWISS MAGAZINE The shocking exposure came from Switzerland itself. The most popular magazine of Switzerland, Schweizer Illustrierte , [dated November 11, 1991] did an expose of 14 politicians of developing nations who, it said, had stashed their bribes in Swiss banks. The title of the expose in Ger- man read “Fluchgelder — Die Sch- weizer Konten der Dictatoren”. In English it meant, “Curse of money — The Swiss bank accounts of the Dictators”. Rajiv Gandhi figured in the expose as one with slush funds in secret accounts. Schweizer Illus- trierte is not some rag. It is the Num- ber One Swiss magazine and sells some 2,10,000 copies. Its readership is 9,18,000 — some 15 per cent of Swiss adults. The magazine had mentioned specific amounts in se- cret Swiss accounts of different lead- ers with their pictures alongside. The report under the picture of Ra- jiv Gandhi, translated into English, read: "2.5 billion francs on the In- dian secret accounts in Switzerland" of "Rajiv Gandhi, Indian". Today the amount of 2.5 billion Swiss Francs equals 2.2 billion US Dollars. But as Rajiv was no more by then, it must become the family inheritance. The other leaders captured by the maga- zine were: Suharto of Indonesia (25.5 billion), Haile Selassie of Ethiopia (22.5 billion), Mobutu of Zaire (6 bil- lion), Shah Pehlvi of Iran (5.7 bil- lion), Saddam Hussein of Iraq (800 million), and Nicolas Ceausescu of Romania (500 million). The figures of slush money mentioned were in milliarden (meaning ‘billions’) units of Swiss Francs. Had Rajiv been alive then, the expose would have caused a political tsunami in India. The box item above shows the pic- tures and the amounts of the leaders as appearing in the magazine. More than the slush money charge it is the family's silence about it, which is baffling. The number one magazine in Switzerland had made the damning charge that Rajiv Gandhi had left be- hind slush funds of $2.2 billion and yet the family has kept mum for 18 years now. How could any honest person tolerate such a serious charge? Well, one could say that the family might not have challenged it because it was pub- lished in far away Switzerland. But Dr Subramanian Swamy had included the Schweizer Illustrierte expose in his write-up “Do You know your Sonia?” in his party, the Janata Party, website, seven years ago, in 2002. It is still on the Party's website. Photocopies of the expose in the Swiss magazine are shown at pages 51 to 53 of Dr Swamy's write-up; also an e-mail from the mag- azine addressed to Dr Swamy on Feb- ruary 22, 2002 at page 50. The e-mail confirms what the magazine had re- ported. The e-mail reads: “Dear sir, We refer to your e-mail of April 4, regarding an article in our magazine Schweizer Illustrierte of November 11, 1991. In this article — Fluchgelder - Die Schweizer Konten der Dictatoren — is Rajiv Gandhi named with tot 2.5 Milliarden CHF on secret accounts. If you want the magazine please indi- cate the exact address. Yours faithfully, Ringer Ltd. Margot Todisco”. The fax and telephone numbers of Margot Todisco are also given in the mail. The e-mail is in box alongside here. Yet no one from the Congress or from the family has sued Dr Swamy till date, nor challenged him. The Swiss expose also prominently fig- ured in the advertisement that some NRIs had put out in the New York Times to protest against Sonia Gandhi when she visited the US in the year 2007. The Indian National Overseas Congress (INOC) filed a defamation case against the ad, expressly "not to defend itself, but Sonia Gandhi". The New York Supreme Court dismissed the case holding that only Sonia Gan- dhi, not the INOC, had the locus to sue. But she would not dare sue. Thus, neither in Switzerland where Sch- weizer Illustrierte exposed Rajiv's se- cret account with billions 18 years ago in 1991, nor in India where Dr Swamy had put it on his party's website seven years ago in 2002, or in the US where the NRIs had boldly advertised the expose two years ago in 2007, would the Gandhi family challenge the ex- pose. In criminal law the conduct of the accused is an important piece of evidence. What does the family's con- duct show here excepting that it has something to hide. SECOND: FAMILY BENEFITED FROM KGB, SAYS BOOK The second expose, Rajiv Gandhi fig- uring again, is that the first family of the Congress accepted political pay- offs from the Russian spy outfit, the KGB. In a highly acclaimed book The State Within a State: The KGB and Its Hold on Russia-Past, Present, and Fu- ture by Yevgenia Albats, a journalist on Moscow News and Izvestia, the author writes: “A letter signed by Victor Chebrik- ov, who replaced Andropov as the KGB head in 1982, noted: the USSR KGB maintains contact with the son of the Premier Minister Rajiv Gandhi (of India). R Gandhi expresses deep grat- itude for the benefits accruing to the prime minister's family from the com- mercial dealings of the firm he con- trols in co-operation with the Soviet Foreign trade organisations. R Gan- dhi reports confidentially that a sub- stantial portion of the funds obtained through this channel are used to sup- port the party of R Gandhi.” (p223) The author also cites the KGB letter and file reference. In Dr Swamy's write-up on Sonia, KGB’s letter in Russian is attached at page 45 and its English translation at pages 43 and 44. The letter says that Rajiv Gandhi him- self has admitted that “benefits” ac- crued to “the prime minister’s family” from commercial dealings through Russian co-operation. All major news- papers, The Hindu and Times of India included, had carried the expose on KGB payments. The book State within a State on KGB was published in 1994. Yet, no one from the Gandhi family has challenged it for 15 years now. Dr Swamy had included it in his expose on Sonia on his party's website since 2002. Yet the family has not challenged him or sued him for seven years. It was again made part of the NRI adver- tisement in New York Times in 2007 when Sonia Gandhi visited the US. Even then only a proxy case was filed to defend Sonia Gandhi's reputation which was promptly saying only So- nia could defend her honour, which she would not. THIRD: BOFORS SLUSH PAYOFF TO ‘Q’ Ottavio Quottrocchi, the star actor in the Bofors scam, is indistinguishable from Sonia’s family. His association with the family is as old as Sonia’s. Even Sonia Gandhi cannot dispute that Q got the first instalment of $7.3 million out of the total bribe of $36.5 million (Three per cent of the contract value of $1.2 billion) due to his front company for swinging the gun deal for Bofors. The slush money of $7.3 million was traced to Q’s account by the CBI which got it frozen some 20 years ago. But when the law was clos- ing in on Q in early 1990s, the Con- gress government stealthily allowed him to escape from India. He turned fugitive, but his slush money had con- tinued to remain frozen. Sten Lindstorm, the Swedish police official who investigated the Bofors case for 18 years, wrote an article in 2004, saying that Sonia should be in- terrogated in the Bofors case, particu- larly on her family's relations with Q, on who introduced Q to Bofors and why did Bofors pay him for deal with India. This article had appeared in several media in India. Subsequently, the CBI, obviously under pressure, quietly allowed Q to smuggle away his slush money from the frozen account. The UPA was in power then, with So- nia Gandhi as chairperson of the Na- tional Advisory Council and also of the UPA. Could this happen unless she had wanted it? She owes an an- swer to the nation. But, far from an- swering any question, she asked the media, as early as in 1999, to show evidence against Q, when the most clinching evidence, the loot caught in Q's frozen account, had fixed him con- clusively. Yet, she defended him even after the Swiss court once, the Delhi High court twice and the Supreme Court finally held him part of the Bo- for's fraud. And now, in the final days of its rule, her government has shame- lessly let Q off the hook by removing his name from global red alert. Be- cause of the red alert he was always in danger of being caught and sent to India. Now that's off. This move to free Q seems to be linked to the slush money issue rising in crescendo in this election. It seems to be in the larger interests of the family — she has to protect 'Q', if he has to protect the family. Otherwise just before elec- tions no government will take the unpopular decision of freeing Q from India's legal net abroad. QED: It does not need a seer to say that the first family of the Congress party is a suspect; a target for probe. Who will probe its billions? Rahul Gandhi has told an election rally in Hyderabad, “elect us, we will investi- gate”. If that happens, the suspects will probe themselves! Schweizer Illustrierte, in its November 11, 1991 issue exposed Rajiv Gandhi (bottom row, second from right) among 14 politicians from developing nations around the world S Gurumurthy [email protected] The writer is a well-known commenta- tor on political and economic issues 9 THE NEW INDIAN EXPRESS THURSDAY, APRIL 30 | 2009 | CHENNAI nation New Delhi, April 29 POLITICAL heavyweights Sonia Gandhi, L K Advani and H D Deve Gowda are among 1,567 candidates whose fate would be decided by voters in the third phase of elections to the Lok Sabha on Thurs- day. Over 14.4 crore voters are eligible to exercise their franchise in this phase to elect 107 members to the Lower House of Parliament. Election would also be held on Thursday to the 32-member Sikkim Legislative Assembly. Polling would be held amid tight secu- rity in 1.65 lakh booths from 7 am across 9 states and 2 Union Territories. Congress president Sonia Gandhi is seeking re-election from Rae Barelli. She had moved to this seat from Amethi in 2004 when her son Rahul Gandhi entered the election arena. Rae Barelli was rep- resented by her mother-in-law the late Indira Gandhi in 1980. Advani, who has been named the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate, has repre- sented Gandhinagar seat since 1991. Prominent candidates in the fray in the third phase include JD(U) chief Sharad Yadav, Congress’s Milind Deora and Priya Dutt, Shiv Sena’s Mohan Raw- le, BJP leaders Ram Naik and Kirit So- maiya, former Karnataka Chief Minister S Bangarappa, Union Ministers Srip- rakash Jaiswal and Jyotiraditya Scindia and actor-turned-politician Amba- reesh. Polling for 26 Lok Sabha seats in Gu- jarat will be completed in one go. Besides Gujarat, polling will be held in 16 seats in Madhya Pradesh, 15 in Ut- tar Pradesh, 14 in West Bengal, 11 each in Bihar and Karnataka, 10 in Maharash- tra and one each in Jammu and Kashmir, Sikkim Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Da- man and Diu. Sikkim has 32 Assembly seats, of which one is reserved for the Sangha Monks, who number 3,058. The results will be out on May 16. The five-round General Elections began on April 16 and so far polling has been com- pleted to 265 Lok Sabha seats to the 545- member House. Elections are held only to 543 seats, as two members are nomi- nated from the Anglo-Indian community PTI Third phase: Voters to decide fate of Sonia, Advani, Gowda today New Delhi: After keeping away from the media scanner for a few days Jagdish Tytler is back in business, but in a new avatar - as campaign organiser for J P Aggarwal whom the party has fielded as Tytler’s replacement in the North East Delhi constituency. When the Express met Tytler, his house was as lively as when he was a Lok Sabha candidate. “I am still involved in the elections, but as an organiser. I am attending two or three meetings a day in Aggarwal’s area, which keeps me busy again,” he said. A map of the Assembly constituencies of North East Delhi was placed on the ta- ble. “Every election campaign is divided into two parts. First, the problems should be identified, and then the solution should be worked out in each area or community,” he said while taking a virtual tour of the area on the map for the day’s campaign plan. “The primary thing is the proper use of the organisation for the elections. Then you should take it to the communi- ty. I am there with Aggarwal’s team wherever they need my help,” he said. Aggarwal is a good candidate to fight the elections, he said when asked about his replacement. “I did not suggest the name. We did not put up any candidate from the Baniya community while the BJP had two. Probably that was the con- sideration,” he added when asked whether he had any say in the choice. “When you reach a position of impor- tance, obviously you build up some re- sistance. You would call it making ene- mies, but I call it part of the process. Some people may not be happy, espe- cially those belonging to the new gener- ation,” he said ENS After replacement, Tytler keeps his hand in as campaign organiser for Aggarwal 30e09cty.indd 1 4/30/2009 12:04:26 AM

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Bofors Exposure

Transcript of Bofors Exposure

Page 1: Bofors Exposure

Who will probe first family’s billions?

When it comes to the topic of funny money stashed in foreign banks, why has the Congress party observed a studied silence over the years, almost always ignoring charges levelled against the Gandhi family?

Mrs Antonia Maino (aka Sonia) Gandhi has finally broken her silence on the Indian slush money

abroad. She told her party workers in Mangalore on April 27, 2009 that "the Congress was taking steps to address the issue of untaxed Indian money in Swiss banks". The delayed response of the first family of the Congress party, troubled by the issue from the word go, is understandable. But, the Swiss mon-ey has already become an electoral issue. That is what has finally forced the family to speak so that the party is not any further seen as being in denial and cynical about the Indian slush funds abroad. It is the family's silence, and the party's denial, that turned the issue into an election agenda. Shorn of the allegations normal in election time, all that L K Advani had said on March 29 was this: 'Mr Prime Minister, vigor-ously take up the issue of Swiss type secret banking and tax havens in the G20 meeting of April 2'. Had the PM told Advani that that was precisely what he was intending to do, that would have been the end of the BJP effort to make an issue of it. A Con-gress party, unburdened by its first family's anxieties, would have done precisely that, particularly when elec-tions are round the corner. But neither the PM nor the party officials would dare do that. Why? Read on for the un-derlying drives.

The first family has other, perhaps bigger, reasons to worry, apart from about the Bofors slush money. Two more stunning exposures — but not as well-known as the Bofors scam — make the first family a target for in-vestigation on slush money. Now on to the heart of the story which has three limbs.

FIRST: $2.2 BILLIONS IN RAJIV'S SECRET ACCOUNTS, SAYS SWISS MAGAZINE

The shocking exposure came from Switzerland itself. The most popular magazine of Switzerland, Schweizer Illustrierte, [dated November 11, 1991] did an expose of 14 politicians of developing nations who, it said, had stashed their bribes in Swiss banks. The title of the expose in Ger-man read “Fluchgelder — Die Sch-weizer Konten der Dictatoren”. In English it meant, “Curse of money — The Swiss bank accounts of the Dictators”. Rajiv Gandhi figured in the expose as one with slush funds in secret accounts. Schweizer Illus-trierte is not some rag. It is the Num-ber One Swiss magazine and sells some 2,10,000 copies. Its readership is 9,18,000 — some 15 per cent of Swiss adults. The magazine had mentioned specific amounts in se-cret Swiss accounts of different lead-ers with their pictures alongside. The report under the picture of Ra-jiv Gandhi, translated into English, read: "2.5 billion francs on the In-dian secret accounts in Switzerland" of "Rajiv Gandhi, Indian". Today the amount of 2.5 billion Swiss Francs equals 2.2 billion US Dollars. But as Rajiv was no more by then, it must become the family inheritance. The other leaders captured by the maga-zine were: Suharto of Indonesia (25.5 billion), Haile Selassie of Ethiopia (22.5 billion), Mobutu of Zaire (6 bil-lion), Shah Pehlvi of Iran (5.7 bil-lion), Saddam Hussein of Iraq (800 million), and Nicolas Ceausescu of Romania (500 million). The figures of slush money mentioned were in milliarden (meaning ‘billions’) units of Swiss Francs. Had Rajiv been alive then, the expose would have caused a political tsunami in India. The box item above shows the pic-tures and the amounts of the leaders as appearing in the magazine.

More than the slush money charge

it is the family's silence about it, which is baffling. The number one magazine in Switzerland had made the damning charge that Rajiv Gandhi had left be-hind slush funds of $2.2 billion and yet the family has kept mum for 18 years now. How could any honest person tolerate such a serious charge? Well, one could say that the family might not have challenged it because it was pub-lished in far away Switzerland. But Dr Subramanian Swamy had included the Schweizer Illustrierte expose in his write-up “Do You know your Sonia?” in his party, the Janata Party, website, seven years ago, in 2002. It is still on the Party's website. Photocopies of the expose in the Swiss magazine are shown at pages 51 to 53 of Dr Swamy's write-up; also an e-mail from the mag-azine addressed to Dr Swamy on Feb-ruary 22, 2002 at page 50. The e-mail confirms what the magazine had re-ported. The e-mail reads:

“Dear sir,

We refer to your e-mail of April 4, regarding an article in our magazine Schweizer Illustrierte of November 11, 1991. In this article — Fluchgelder - Die Schweizer Konten der Dictatoren — is Rajiv Gandhi named with tot 2.5 Milliarden CHF on secret accounts. If you want the magazine please indi-cate the exact address.

Yours faithfully, Ringer Ltd. Margot Todisco”.

The fax and telephone numbers of Margot Todisco are also given in the mail. The e-mail is in box alongside here. Yet no one from the Congress or from the family has sued Dr Swamy till date, nor challenged him. The Swiss expose also prominently fig-

ured in the advertisement that some NRIs had put out in the New York Times to protest against Sonia Gandhi when she visited the US in the year 2007. The Indian National Overseas Congress (INOC) filed a defamation case against the ad, expressly "not to defend itself, but Sonia Gandhi". The New York Supreme Court dismissed the case holding that only Sonia Gan-dhi, not the INOC, had the locus to sue. But she would not dare sue. Thus, neither in Switzerland where Sch-weizer Illustrierte exposed Rajiv's se-cret account with billions 18 years ago in 1991, nor in India where Dr Swamy had put it on his party's website seven years ago in 2002, or in the US where the NRIs had boldly advertised the expose two years ago in 2007, would the Gandhi family challenge the ex-pose. In criminal law the conduct of the accused is an important piece of evidence. What does the family's con-duct show here excepting that it has something to hide.

SECOND: FAMILY BENEFITED FROM KGB, SAYS BOOK

The second expose, Rajiv Gandhi fig-uring again, is that the first family of the Congress accepted political pay-offs from the Russian spy outfit, the KGB. In a highly acclaimed book The State Within a State: The KGB and Its Hold on Russia-Past, Present, and Fu-ture by Yevgenia Albats, a journalist on Moscow News and Izvestia, the author writes:

“A letter signed by Victor Chebrik-ov, who replaced Andropov as the KGB head in 1982, noted: the USSR KGB maintains contact with the son of the Premier Minister Rajiv Gandhi (of India). R Gandhi expresses deep grat-itude for the benefits accruing to the prime minister's family from the com-

mercial dealings of the firm he con-trols in co-operation with the Soviet Foreign trade organisations. R Gan-dhi reports confidentially that a sub-stantial portion of the funds obtained through this channel are used to sup-port the party of R Gandhi.” (p223)

The author also cites the KGB letter and file reference. In Dr Swamy's write-up on Sonia, KGB’s letter in Russian is attached at page 45 and its English translation at pages 43 and 44. The letter says that Rajiv Gandhi him-self has admitted that “benefits” ac-crued to “the prime minister’s family”

from commercial dealings through Russian co-operation. All major news-papers, The Hindu and Times of India included, had carried the expose on KGB payments. The book State within a State on KGB was published in 1994. Yet, no one from the Gandhi family has challenged it for 15 years now. Dr Swamy had included it in his expose on Sonia on his party's website since 2002. Yet the family has not challenged him or sued him for seven years. It was again made part of the NRI adver-tisement in New York Times in 2007

when Sonia Gandhi visited the US. Even then only a proxy case was filed to defend Sonia Gandhi's reputation which was promptly saying only So-nia could defend her honour, which she would not.

THIRD: BOFORS SLUSH PAYOFF TO ‘Q’

Ottavio Quottrocchi, the star actor in the Bofors scam, is indistinguishable from Sonia’s family. His association with the family is as old as Sonia’s. Even Sonia Gandhi cannot dispute that Q got the first instalment of $7.3 million out of the total bribe of $36.5 million (Three per cent of the contract value of $1.2 billion) due to his front company for swinging the gun deal for Bofors. The slush money of $7.3 million was traced to Q’s account by the CBI which got it frozen some 20 years ago. But when the law was clos-ing in on Q in early 1990s, the Con-gress government stealthily allowed him to escape from India. He turned fugitive, but his slush money had con-tinued to remain frozen.

Sten Lindstorm, the Swedish police official who investigated the Bofors case for 18 years, wrote an article in 2004, saying that Sonia should be in-terrogated in the Bofors case, particu-larly on her family's relations with Q, on who introduced Q to Bofors and why did Bofors pay him for deal with India. This article had appeared in several media in India. Subsequently, the CBI, obviously under pressure, quietly allowed Q to smuggle away his slush money from the frozen account. The UPA was in power then, with So-nia Gandhi as chairperson of the Na-tional Advisory Council and also of the UPA. Could this happen unless she had wanted it? She owes an an-swer to the nation. But, far from an-swering any question, she asked the media, as early as in 1999, to show evidence against Q, when the most clinching evidence, the loot caught in Q's frozen account, had fixed him con-clusively. Yet, she defended him even after the Swiss court once, the Delhi High court twice and the Supreme Court finally held him part of the Bo-for's fraud. And now, in the final days of its rule, her government has shame-lessly let Q off the hook by removing his name from global red alert. Be-cause of the red alert he was always in danger of being caught and sent to India. Now that's off. This move to free Q seems to be linked to the slush money issue rising in crescendo in this election. It seems to be in the

larger interests of the family — she has to protect 'Q', if he has to protect the family. Otherwise just before elec-tions no government will take the unpopular decision of freeing Q from India's legal net abroad.

QED: It does not need a seer to say that the first family of the Congress party is a suspect; a target for probe. Who will probe its billions? Rahul Gandhi has told an election rally in Hyderabad, “elect us, we will investi-gate”. If that happens, the suspects will probe themselves!

Schweizer Illustrierte, in its November 11, 1991 issue exposed Rajiv Gandhi (bottom row, second from right) among 14 politicians from developing nations around the world

S [email protected]

The writer is a well-known commenta-tor on political and economic issues

9THE NEW INDIAN EXPRESS✵ THURSDAY, APRIL 30 | 2009 | CHENNAInation

New Delhi, April 29

POLITICAL heavyweights Sonia Gandhi, L K Advani and H D Deve Gowda are among 1,567 candidates whose fate would be decided by voters in the third phase of elections to the Lok Sabha on Thurs-day.

Over 14.4 crore voters are eligible to exercise their franchise in this phase to elect 107 members to the Lower House of Parliament. Election would also be held on Thursday to the 32-member Sikkim Legislative Assembly.

Polling would be held amid tight secu-rity in 1.65 lakh booths from 7 am across 9 states and 2 Union Territories.

Congress president Sonia Gandhi is seeking re-election from Rae Barelli. She

had moved to this seat from Amethi in 2004 when her son Rahul Gandhi entered the election arena. Rae Barelli was rep-resented by her mother-in-law the late Indira Gandhi in 1980.

Advani, who has been named the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate, has repre-sented Gandhinagar seat since 1991.

Prominent candidates in the fray in the third phase include JD(U) chief Sharad Yadav, Congress’s Milind Deora and Priya Dutt, Shiv Sena’s Mohan Raw-le, BJP leaders Ram Naik and Kirit So-maiya, former Karnataka Chief Minister S Bangarappa, Union Ministers Srip-rakash Jaiswal and Jyotiraditya Scindia and actor-turned-politician Amba-reesh.

Polling for 26 Lok Sabha seats in Gu-

jarat will be completed in one go.Besides Gujarat, polling will be held

in 16 seats in Madhya Pradesh, 15 in Ut-tar Pradesh, 14 in West Bengal, 11 each in Bihar and Karnataka, 10 in Maharash-tra and one each in Jammu and Kashmir, Sikkim Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Da-man and Diu.

Sikkim has 32 Assembly seats, of which one is reserved for the Sangha Monks, who number 3,058.

The results will be out on May 16. The five-round General Elections began on April 16 and so far polling has been com-pleted to 265 Lok Sabha seats to the 545-member House. Elections are held only to 543 seats, as two members are nomi-nated from the Anglo-Indian community ■ PTI

Third phase: Voters to decide fate of Sonia, Advani, Gowda todayNew Delhi: After keeping away from the media scanner for a few days Jagdish Tytler is back in business, but in a new avatar - as campaign organiser for J P Aggarwal whom the party has fielded as Tytler’s replacement in the North East Delhi constituency. When the Express met Tytler, his house was as lively as when he was a Lok Sabha candidate. “I am still involved in the elections, but as an organiser. I am attending two or three meetings a day in Aggarwal’s area, which keeps me busy again,” he said.

A map of the Assembly constituencies of North East Delhi was placed on the ta-

ble. “Every election campaign is divided into two parts. First, the problems should be identified, and then the solution should be worked out

in each area or community,” he said while taking a virtual tour of the area on the map for the day’s campaign plan.

“The primary thing is the proper use of the organisation for the elections. Then you should take it to the communi-ty. I am there with Aggarwal’s team wherever they need my help,” he said.

Aggarwal is a good candidate to fight the elections, he said when asked about his replacement. “I did not suggest the name. We did not put up any candidate from the Baniya community while the BJP had two. Probably that was the con-sideration,” he added when asked whether he had any say in the choice.

“When you reach a position of impor-tance, obviously you build up some re-sistance. You would call it making ene-mies, but I call it part of the process. Some people may not be happy, espe-cially those belonging to the new gener-ation,” he said ■ ENS

After replacement, Tytler keeps his hand in as campaign organiser for Aggarwal

30e09cty.indd 1 4/30/2009 12:04:26 AM