Kaleshwaram Case Adjourned: How Telangana HC Delay Impacts Corruption Probe

The Telangana High Court has pushed the Kaleshwaram Commission case hearing to January next year. Former Chief Minister KCR and other officials got more time as the government prepares its legal response. The court extended protection for the accused politicians from any action based on the commission's findings. This delay comes amid the state government's decision to transfer the entire probe to the CBI for deeper investigation.

Key Points: Telangana HC Adjourns Kaleshwaram Commission Case Hearing

  • Court grants four weeks for government to file counter-affidavits in corruption case
  • Interim protection extended for KCR, Harish Rao against commission report
  • Petitioners argue commission violated natural justice principles
  • State government previously decided to hand over probe to CBI
2 min read

Telangana HC adjourns hearing in Kaleshwaram Commission case to January

Telangana High Court postpones Kaleshwaram corruption case hearing to January, extends protection for KCR and others while government prepares CBI probe response.

"The Commission made findings regarding their conduct without following prescription of law - Petitioners' Argument"

Hyderabad, Nov 12

The Telangana High Court has adjourned hearing on the petitions by former Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao, former Irrigation Minister T. Harish Rao, former Chief Secretary S. K. Joshi and senior IAS officer Smitha Sabharwal, seeking orders to quash the report of the Justice P.C. Ghose (retd) Commission probed the alleged irregularities in the Kaleshwaram Lift Irrigation Project.

A bench of Chief Justice Aparesh Kumar Singh and Justice G.M. Mohiuddin adjourned the hearing to the second week of January after the state government sought time to file counter-affidavits.

The court gave four weeks to the government to file counter-affidavits and another three weeks to the petitioners to file their reply.

It extended, till the next hearing, the interim order restraining the state government from taking any action against the petitioners on the basis of the Kaleshwaram Commission report. The interim order was passed on September 2.

The state government, on September 1, decided to hand over the probe into the case to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

Chief Minister Revanth Reddy had made the announcement in the Assembly after a marathon debate on the Ghose Commission report.

The petitioners contended that the very constitution of the Commission should be declared arbitrary and illegal, as it was made against the provisions of the Commissions of Inquiry Act.

According to them, the Commission made the findings regarding their conduct and reputation without following the prescription of law under 8B and 8C of the Commissions of Inquiry Act, and violated the principles of natural justice.

The petitioners argued that the Commission’s report was invalid, prejudicial, scurrilous and defamatory against them.

Headed by former Supreme Court judge Pinaki Chandra Ghose, the one-man commission submitted its report to the Telangana government on July 31.

The Commission was constituted on March 14, 2024, to probe the alleged irregularities in planning, design, construction, quality control, operation and maintenance of Medigadda, Annaram, and Sundilla Barrages of the Kaleshwaram project constructed during the term of the previous BRS government.

The Commission held KCR directly and vicariously accountable for irregularities in planning, execution, completion, operation and maintenance of the Kaleshwaram project. It also indicted Harish Rao, then Chief Secretary Joshi and then Secretary to Chief Minister Smitha Sabharwal.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The court is following due process by giving time for counter-affidavits. Let's not rush justice - proper procedure must be followed, especially in such high-profile cases involving former CM and ministers.
A
Arjun K
As a civil engineer from Hyderabad, I've seen the Kaleshwaram project firsthand. The technical issues with Medigadda barrage were evident. Hope CBI investigation brings out the truth about where all the money went.
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Sarah B
The petitioners' argument about violation of natural justice principles seems valid. Every accused deserves fair hearing procedures, regardless of the allegations against them.
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Vikram M
Typical political drama! BRS government builds the project, Congress government orders probe. Both parties playing games while common people suffer. When will infrastructure projects stop being political tools? 😠
M
Michael C
The interim protection till next hearing is crucial. No action should be taken based on commission report until the court examines all legal aspects. Justice must be transparent and fair for all parties involved.

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