Chaturvedi, who is the deputy secretary at AIIMS, has also sought a personal appointment with Prime Minister Narendra Modi so that he could convey his "mann ki baat" on the plight of honest civil servants in the country.
Chaturvedi had donated the award money of USD 30,000 (Rs 19,85,187 as per exchange rate prevailing at that time) into the AIIMS account in September for treatment of poor patients under Rastriya Arogya Nidhi.
"The mala fide and unwillingness is absolutely evident from the fact that in no other case of any private donor, the matter was referred to Health Ministry and the contributions were immediately deposited into institute accounts, while in my case knowing fully well about my credentials and source of funds, the matter was deliberately referred to Health Ministry, just to negate the contribution," Chaturvedi said in his letter to Modi.
He said meetings with the Health Secretary had also not yielded any results on the matter and that even now there is no clear cut direction from the Health Ministry for depositing the amount.
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On September 21, Chaturvedi had written to the AIIMS
Director donating the entire award money after which deputy director administration of AIIMS, V Srinivas, sent the proposal to the Health Ministry for examination.
Chaturvedi further said, "The humiliation inflicted upon me and discriminatory treatment meted out, by way of delay/denial to deposit the award money into Institute account, was a direct result of personal annoyance of J P Nadda, Union Health Minister and President AIIMS, who had launched a persistent campaign against me right from May 2013..."
He also alleged that despite serving as the Deputy Secretary at AIIMS, the post of which was created specifically to monitor infrastructure projects to ensure their timely completion he was never allowed to perform this assigned duty because of the massive corruption involved in the projects.
Chaturvedi and founder of NGO Goonj Anshu Gupta were the two Indians selected for Ramon Magsaysay Award in 2015.