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The court has given the Arunachal Pradesh government five weeks to file a detailed affidavit listing the parties to whom contracts were awarded. Additionally, it has instructed the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) to submit a final report, rejecting an earlier CAG report as insufficient. The next hearing is scheduled for July 21.
During the proceedings, the Arunachal Pradesh government defended the contracts, stating that they were awarded in accordance with legal guidelines and that the land was provided free of cost for employment generation. The state counsel argued that the PIL is limited to just one of the 28 districts in Arunachal Pradesh and dismissed it as “an abuse of due process.”
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“This is a politically motivated PIL,” the state government stated. “The petitioners are individuals who do not want development in the state.”
Senior advocate Prashant Bhushan, representing the petitioners, strongly criticized the contract allocations, alleging that the state is being run like a private business. “The state of affairs is shocking,” Bhushan said. “All major contracts are being awarded to the Chief Minister’s wife, cousin, and other family members.”
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The petitioners have called for an independent probe by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) or a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to investigate the matter.
With the Supreme Court now demanding greater transparency, the case could set a precedent for stricter scrutiny of government contracts linked to politicians and their families.