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February 2013

PART C: Information on & Around

By Narayan Varma, Chartered Accountant
Reading Time 4 mins
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Pratibha Patil on Africa Trip

A month before she left office, the Centre spent a whopping Rs. 18.08 crore on the then president Pratibha Patil’s 10-day official visit to South Africa and Seychelles.

A reply to a RTI query has revealed that the Centre paid Rs. 16.38 crore to Air India for the special aircraft used for the two-nation trip from 29th April to 7th May last year.

The RTI reply revealed that an expenditure of Rs. 1.46 crore was incurred during her visit to the South African capital Pretoria, of which Rs. 71.82 lakh was spent on her local stay, Rs. 52.33 lakh on transportation and Rs. 22.12 lakh on other expenses. In Durban Rs. 23.55 lakh was spent on her visit, with Rs. 18 lakh going towards hotel stay and Rs. 5.27 lakh on transportation.

During her tenure at Rashtrapati Bhavan, Patil incurred expenses of Rs. 205 Crore on 12 trips to 22 countries.

School Principal

An RTI query filed by an activist might lead to the ouster of the current principal of a south Mumbai school. The reply to the RTI shows that the current principal of St Mary’s High School (ICSE) in Mazgaon is still at the post at 68 years of age while the state rules make it clear that school teaching staff and principal have to retire at the age of 58 years.

“I filed an RTI to check the status of 39 nonstate- board schools in the city, and found out that most are not following the rules as prescribed by the state education department,” said Nanasaheb Kute Patil, who filed the RTI query. The questions included whether the schools have all permissions prescribed by the government, annual fees demanded by them, age and qualification of teachers/principals, etc. “My aim is to make sure students don’t suffer because of school authorities,” he added. Following this, the south zone education department has sent a notice to the school asking them to remove the principal from his post.

Ajit Pawar

Ajit Pawar tendered his resignation on 25th September on moral grounds, after allegations of massive irregularities in irrigation projects in Vidharbha during his stint in previous cabinet as Water Resources minister. The governor accepted his resignation on 29th September.

From 30th September to 14th October, the state offered him facilities without any charge, according to the reply to an RTI application filed by Anil Galgali. A government resolution dated 12th October stated that after 14th October, Pawar was to be charged Rs. 5 a square foot if he wanted to avail of accommodation in the bungalow in Malabar Hill with an uninterrupted supply of all amenities – gas, water, power and telephone at state expenses. Officials from the general administration department said the rule/procedure was applicable on all cabinet ministers to allow them find new residences to ensure smooth transition from power.

But Galgali feels otherwise. “The high-voltage drama related to Pawar’s resignation was a well-planned political move,” he said. “If Pawar resigned from his ministerial post on moral grounds, then he should have shown the same morality and should have given back the Devgiri bungalow to the government. In the city’s slums, no one even gets a hut on rent for Rs. 5 a sq ft. If a government regulation (GR) states that outgoing ministers to be charged Rs. 5 a sq. ft for accommodation in a posh area like Malabar Hill, there is something fundamentally wrong and the GR must be amended.”

Security Firm

High-profile private security firm, NISA, with 45,000 guards on its payroll, has failed to file with Mumbai police with basic yet crucial details like how many of its personnel carry firearms. Yogesh Hilkar, a member of the NGO ‘Swabhiman’ run by Congress MLA Nitesh Narayan Rane, has uncovered these facts through a RTI plea.

“It is shocking that the company has not supplied details of all the armed men working with it. This is, potentially, a huge security threat,” when the Deputy Commissioner of Police, Headquarter (II) – who is responsible for maintaining a database of all the security agencies in the city and the Assistant Commissioner of Police from DN Nagar division, where NISA has its corporate office, have failed to furnish any details in this respect.

The company’s website (http://www.nisaeye.com/) notes that it is having 45,000 security personnel in its ranks, based at over 3,500 installations in India, and managed through about 45 branches.

 It claims that it’s been administering security to some of the biggest names in the corporate world since 1973.

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