Republic
Of Scams
Total Scam Money (approx) Since 1992:
Rs. 73000000000000 Cr.
(73 Lakh Crore)
Hard to digest ?
Just check the below given details
1992 -Harshad Mehta securities scam Rs 5,000 cr
1994 -Sugar import scam Rs 650 cr
1995 -Preferential allotment scam Rs 5,000 cr
Yugoslav Dinar scam Rs 400 cr
Meghalaya Forest scam Rs 300 cr
1996: -Fertiliser import scam Rs 1,300 cr
Urea scam Rs 133 cr
Bihar fodder scam Rs 950 cr
1997 -Sukh Ram telecom scam Rs 1,500 cr
SNC Lavalin power project scam Rs 374 cr
Bihar land scandal Rs 400 cr
C.R. Bhansali stock scam Rs 1,200 cr
1998 -Teak plantation swindle Rs 8,000 cr
2001 -UTI scam Rs 4,800 cr
Dinesh Dalmia stock scam Rs 595 cr
Ketan Parekh securities scam Rs 1,250 cr
2002 -Sanjay Agarwal Home Trade scam Rs 600 cr
2003 -Telgi stamp paper scam Rs 172 cr
2005 -IPO-Demat scam Rs 146 cr
Bihar flood relief scam Rs 17 cr
Scorpene submarine scam Rs 18,978 cr
2006 -Punjab's City Centre project scam Rs 1,500 cr,
Taj Corridor scam Rs 175 cr
2008 -Pune billionaire Hassan Ali Khan tax default Rs 50,000 cr
The Satyam scam Rs 10,000 cr
Army ration pilferage scam Rs 5,000 cr
The 2-G spectrum swindle Rs 60,000 cr
State Bank of Saurashtra scam Rs 95 cr
Illegal monies in Swiss banks, as estimated in 2008 Rs 71,00,000 cr
2009: -The Jharkhand medical equipment scam Rs 130 cr
Rice export scam Rs 2,500 cr
Orissa mine scam Rs 7,000 cr
Madhu Koda mining scam Rs 4,000 cr"
SC refuses to quash PIL against Mayawati in Taj corridor scam
Orissa mine scam could be worth more than Rs 14k cr
CORRUPTION, MONEY LAUNDERING SCAM, Koda discharged from hospital, arrest
imminent
'A Cover-Up Operation':
"It's a scam involving close to Rs 60,000 crores"
Spectrum scam: How govt lost Rs 60,000 crore
India's biggest scams 1,
Ramalinga Raju, Rs. 50.4 billion
India's biggest scams 2, Harshad Mehta, Rs. 40 billion
India's biggest scams 3, Ketan Parekh, Rs. 10 billion
India's biggest scams 4, C R Bhansali, Rs. 12 billion
India's biggest scams 5, Cobbler scam
India's biggest scams 6, IPO Scam
India's biggest scams 7, Dinesh Dalmia, Rs. 5.95 billion
India's biggest scams 8, Abdul Karim Telgi, Rs. 1.71 billion
India's biggest scams 9, Virendra Rastogi, Rs. 430 million
India's biggest scams 10, The UTI Scam, Rs. 320 million
India's biggest scams 11, Uday Goyal, Rs. 2.1 billion
India's biggest scams 12, Sanjay Agarwal, Rs. 6 billion
India's biggest scams 13, Dinesh Singhania, Rs. 1.2 billion
1, Jeep Purchase (1948) :- Free India's corruption graph begins. V. K.
Krishna Menon, then the Indian high commissioner to Britain, bypassed protocol
to sign a deal worth Rs 80 lakh with a foreign firm for the purchase of army
jeeps. The case was closed in 1955 and soon after Menon joined the Nehru
cabinet.
2, Cycle Imports (1951) :- S.A. Venkataraman, then the secretary,
ministry of commerce and industry, was jailed for accepting a bribe in lieu of
granting a cycle import quota to a company.
3, BHU Funds (1956) :- In one of the first instances of corruption in
educational institutions, Benaras Hindu University officials were accused of
misappropriation of funds worth Rs 50 lakh.
4, MUNDHRA SCANDAL (1957):- It was the media that first hinted there
might be a scam involving the sale of shares to LIC, Feroz Gandhi sources the
confidential correspondence between the then Finance Minister T.T.
Krishnamachari and his principal finance secretary, and raised a question in
Parliament on the sale of 'fraudulent' shares to LIC by a Calcutta-based
Marwari businessman named Haridas Mundhra. The then Prime Minister, Jawaharlal
Nehru, set up a one-man commission headed by Justice M.C.Chagla to investigate
the matter when it becomes evident that there was a prima facie case. Chagla
concluded that Mundhra had sold fictitious shares to LIC, thereby defrauding
the insurance behemoth to the tune of Rs. 1.25 crore. Mundhra was sentenced to
22 years in prison. The scam also forced the resignation of T.T.Krishnamachari.
6, Teja Loans (1960):- Shipping magnate Jayant Dharma Teja took loans
worth Rs 22 crore to establish the Jayanti Shipping Company. In 1960, the
authorities discovered that he was actually siphoning off money to his own
account, after which Teja fled the country.
7, Kairon Scam (1963):- Pratap Singh Kairon became the first Indian
chief minister to be accused of abusing his power for his own benefit and that
of his sons and relatives. He quit a year later.
8, Patnaik's Own Goal (1965) :- Orissa Chief Minister Biju Patnaik was
forced to resign after it was discovered that he had favoured his
privately-held company Kalinga Tubes in awarding a government contract.
9, Maruti Scandal (1974) :- Well before the company was set up, former
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's name came up in the first Maruti scandal, where
her son Sanjay Gandhi was favoured with a license to make passenger cars.
10, Solanki Exposé (1992) :- At the World Economic Forum, Madhavsinh
Solanki, then the external affairs minister, slipped a letter to his Swiss
counterpart asking their government to stop the probe into the Bofors
kickbacks. Solanki resigned when India Today broke the story.
11, Kuo Oil Deal (1976):- The Indian Oil Corporation signed an Rs
2.2-crore oil contract with a non-existent firm in Hong Kong and a kickback was
given. The petroleum and chemicals minister was directed to make the purchase.
12, Antulay Trust (1981) :- With the exposure of this scandal concerning
A.R. Antulay, then the chief minister of Maharashtra, The Indian Express was
reborn. Antulay had garnered Rs 30 crore from businesses dependent on state
resources like cement and kept the money in a private trust.
13, HDW Commissions (1987) :- HDW, the German submarine maker, was
blacklisted after allegations that commissions worth Rs 20 crore had been paid.
In 2005, the case was finally closed, in HDW's favour.
14, Bofors Pay-Off (1987) :- A Swedish firm was accused of paying Rs 64
crore to Indian bigwigs, including Rajiv Gandhi, then the prime minister, to secure
the purchase of the Bofors gun.
15, St Kitts Forgery (1989) :- An attempt was made to sully V.P. Singh's
Mr Clean image by forging documents to allege that he was a beneficiary of his
son Ajeya Singh's account in the First Trust Corp. at St Kitts, with a deposit
of $21 million.
16, Airbus Scandal (1990) :- Indian Airlines's (IA) signing of the Rs
2,000-crore deal with Airbus instead of Boeing caused a furore following the
crash of an A-320. New planes were grounded, causing IA a weekly loss of Rs 2.5
crore.
17, Securities Scam (1992) :- Harshad Mehta manipulated banks to siphon
off money and invested the funds in the stock market, leading to a crash. The
loss: Rs 5,000 crore.
18, Indian Bank Rip-off (1992) :- Aided by M. Gopalakrishnan, then the
chairman of the Indian Bank, borrowers-mostly small corporates and exporters
from the south-were lent a total of over Rs 1,300 crore, which they never paid
back.
19, Sugar Import (1994) :- As food minister, Kalpnath Rai presided over
the import of sugar at a price higher than that of the market, causing a loss
of Rs 650 crore to the exchequer. He resigned following the allegations.
20, MS SHOES SCAM (1994) :- Anyone who war old enough in 1994 to read
will remember the advertisements- tens of them intriguingly headlined: 'Who is
Pawan Sachdeva?' For the record, it was the peak of the public issued-led
advertising boom and the ads were created by the Delhi branch of Rediffusion.
Sachdeva, the promoter of MS Shoes, allegedly used company funds to buy shares
(of his own company) and rig prices, prior to a public issue. He is alleged to
have colluded with officials in the Securities Exchange Board of India (SEBI)
and SBI Caps, which lead-managed the issue, to dupe the public into investing
in his Rs. 699-crore public-***-rights issue. Sachdeva was later acquitted
21, JMM Bribes (1995) :- Jharkhand Mukti Morcha leader Shailendra Mahato
testified that he and three party members received bribes of Rs 30 lakh to bail
out the P.V. Narasimha Rao government in the 1993 no-confidence motion.
22, In a Pickle (1996) :- Pickle baron Lakhubhai Pathak raised a stink
when he accused former Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao and godman
Chandraswami of accepting a bribe of Rs 10 lakh from him for securing a paper
pulp contract.
23, Telecom Scam (1996) :- Former minister of state for communication
Sukh Ram was accused of causing a loss of Rs 1.6 crore to the exchequer by
favouring a Hyderabad- based private firm in the purchase of telecom equipment.
He, along with two others, was convicted in 2002.
24, Fodder Scam (1996) :- The accountant general's concerns about the
withdrawal of excess funds by Bihar's animal husbandry department unveiled a Rs
950-crore scam involving Lalu Prasad Yadav, then the state chief minister. He
resigned a year later.
25, Urea Deal (1996) :- C.S. Ramakrishnan, MD, National Fertiliser, and
a group of businessmen close to the P.V. Narasimha Rao regime fleeced the
government and took Rs 133 crore from the import of two lakh tonne of urea,
which was never delivered.
26, Hawala Diaries (1996) :- The scandal surfaced following CBI raids on
hawala operators in Delhi in 1991. But it was S.K. Jain's diaries that had
heads rolling.
27, CRB SCAM (1997) :- Another scam forged by greed and discovered
through accident. Chain Roop Bhansali, a smart-talking entrepreneur, created a
pyramid financial empire based on high-cost financing. At its peak, his Rs.
1,000-crore financial conglomerate had in its ranks a mutual fund, a financial
services company into fixed deposits, and a merchant bank. That Bhansali knew
how to work the system became evident when he also managed to secure a
provisional banking license. Then his luck ran out. An executive in the State
Bank of India Inadvertently discovered that some interest warrants issued by
Bhansali were not backed by cash. The bubble finally burst in May 1997, but by
that time investors had lost over Rs. 1,000 crore. This was among the first
retail scams in India and it was played out, in smaller avatars, across the
country-especially in the South where financial services companies promised
returns in excess of 20 per cent and decamped with the principal. Bhansali was
arrested for a few weeks and released later on bail.
28, MEHTA'S SECOND COMING (1998) :- The Big Bull returned to the bourses.
This time, he allegedly colluded with the promoters of BPL, Videocon
International, and Sterile Industries to rig the share prices of these
companies. The inevitable collapse happened sooner than planned, Harshad Mehta
orchestrated a cover-up operation that included a high=jinks effort by
officials of Bombay Stock Exchange to (illegally ) open the trading system in
the middle of the night to set things right, but the damage had been done. SEBI
finally passed its ruling on the scam in 2001, banning the three companies
concerned from tapping the market-BPL, for two years. Mehta was debarred for
life form dealing in Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT) in October 2001
29, VANISHING COMPANIES SCAM (1998) :- A passing remark heard by then
Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram resulted in a furore over what was
badly-kept secret on Dalal street. Chidambaram was told that hundreds of
companies had disappeared after raising moneys form the public. An informal scrutiny
revealed that perhaps over 600 companies were missing. Chidambaram ordered a
probe by SEBI. The SEBI probe conducted in May 1998 revealed that while many
companies are not traded on the bourses at least 80 companies that had rises
Rs.330.78 crore were simply missing. Later that year, the Department of Company
Affairs (DCA) was asked to probe and penalize these companies. DCA still
investigating. Investigations continue to this day.
30, PLANTATION COMPANIES SCAM (1999) :- It was as innovative a swindle as
any effected in the world. Savvy entrepreneurs convinced gullible investors
that given the right irrigation and fertilizer inputs, teak, strawberries, and
anything else that could be grown, would grow anywhere in the country. The
promoters could afford to collect money from investors and not worry about
retribution (or returns, for that matter). For, plantation companies fell under
the purview of neither SEBI nor Reserve Bank of India. Indeed, they didn't even
come under the scope of the Department decided to change things in 1999, enough
investors had been gulled: 653 companies, between them, had raised Rs. 2,563
crore from investors. To date, not many investors have got their principals
back, just another affirmation of the old saying about money not growing on
trees.
31, Match Fixing (2000) :- Mohammed Azharuddin, till then India's
cricket captain, was accused of match-fixing. He and Ajay Sharma were banned
from playing, while Ajay Jadeja and Manoj Prabhakar were suspended for five
years.
32, KETAN PAREKH SCAM (2001) :- Ketan Parekh's modus operandi wasn't
very different from Harshad Mehta's. If Mehta used banker's receipts, then
Parekh used pay orders to ramp up the prices of his favourite scrips (the
K-10). Apart from money form the banking system Parekh also rerouted money from
corporated like HFCL (Rs. 425 crore), and Zee (Rs. 340 crore) to good effect.
He was caught when pay-orders issued by Madhavpura Mercantile Cooperative Bank
bounced. Although the total amount involved in the scam was just Rs. 137 crore,
the impact was far greater.
Apparently, when a bear cartel sensed Parekh was in trouble, it stepped in and
leveraged a dip in the NASDAQ to bear down stock prices. The resultant slump in
the markets happened soon after Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha presented what
he considered his best budget ever. Under pressure from the government, SEBI
investigated the scam and heads began to roll. Among them: the entire
management team of BSE, including its president Anand Rathi, CSFB, First
Global, and, in an indirect connection, P.S.Subramanyam, the Chairman of UTL
Evidently, for the 18 months that PSS was Chairman of UTI, the Trust had
mirrored the actions of the bull cartel. The result? When the market tanked, so
did the NAV of its holy cow, the US-64.
33, Tehelka Sting (2001) :- Tehelka, an online news portal, used spycams
to catch army officers and politicians accepting bribes, in their sting
operation called Operation Westend. Investigative journalism turned another
corner in the country.
34, Stockmarket Scam (2001) :- The mayhem that wiped off over Rs 1,15,000
crore in the markets in March 2001 was masterminded by the Pentafour bull Ketan
Parekh. He was arrested in December 2002 and banned from acccessing the capital
market for 14 years.
35, Home Trade Scam (2002) :- Under the pretext of gilt trading, Rs 600
crore was swindled from over 25 cooperative banks in Maharashtra and Gujarat by
a Navi Mumbai-based brokerage firm Home Trade. Sanjay Agarwal, CEO of the firm,
was arrested in May 2002.
36, Stamp Paper Scam (2003) :- The sheer magnitude of the racket was
shocking-it caused a loss of Rs 30,000 crore to the exchequer. Disclosures of
the mastermind behind it, Abdul Karim Telgi, implicated top police officers and
bureaucrats.
37, Oil-for-Food Scandal (2005) :- K. Natwar Singh was unceremoniously
dropped from the Cabinet when his name surfaced in the Volcker Report on the
Iraq oil-for-food scam.
What India Could Do With Rs 73
Lakh Crore?
Build: 2.4 crore primary healthcare centres. That’s at least 3
for every village, at a cost of Rs 30 lakh each.
Build: 24.1 lakh Kendriya Vidyalayas at a cost of Rs 3.02 crore each,
with two sections from cl-ass VI to XII.
Construct: 14.6 crore low-cost houses assuming a cost of Rs 5 lakh a
unit.
Set up: 2,703 coal-based power plants of 600 MW each. Each costs Rs 2,700
crore.
Supply: 12 lakh CFL bulbs. That’s enough light for each of
India’s 6 lakh villages
Construct: 14.6 lakh km of two-lane highways. That’s a road around
India’s perimeter 97 times over.
Clean up: 50 major rivers for the next 121 years, at Rs 1,200 crore a river
every year.
Launch: 90 NREGA-style schemes, each worth roughly Rs 81,111 crore.
Announce: 121 more loan waiver schemes. All of them worth Rs 60,000 crore.
Give: Rs 56,000 to every Indian. Even better, give Rs 1.82 lakh to 40
crore Indians living BPL.
Hand out: 60.8 crore Tata Nanos to 60.8 crore people. Or four times as
many laptops.
Grow the GDP: The scam money is 27% more than our GDP of Rs 53 lakh
crore."
Greed, graft, politics, bribery, dirty money. Just another day in the life of a
nation still rated among the most corrupt in the world. Scan the scams that
have grabbed headlines, destroyed reputations and left many people poorer.