He also appeared to support Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal's allegation that a DDCA official had sought sexual favours from a woman if she wanted her son to be part of its cricket team, saying it was not a new thing and he had raised a similar issue in 2007.
At a press conference here, Azad quoted from the report of Serious Fraud Investigation Office, which had gone into the Delhi cricket body affairs, to claim that it had recommended "prosecution" of Jaitley among others but it has not been done in the last three years.
"So SFIO recommended that under Section 5 G of the Companies Act, the Registrar of Companies should prosecute them for not compounding. It shows the BCCI is above law. It has been three years since the recommendation but they have not been prosecuted," he said.
Demanding government oversight of sports administration, he blamed "seven-eight politicians affiliated to the BCCI for the failure of then Sports Minister Ajay Maken in pushing a bill in this regard when the UPA was in power.
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Asked to name these politicians, he named Jaitley, Thakur, Rajeev Shukla, Jyotiraditya Scindia, Farooq Abdullah and Praful Patel. All of them were then, and most still are, involved in cricket administration except Patel, who is All India Football Federation President.
Referring to Thakur, the three-time MP from Darbhagna said, "You cannot wear two caps. This is a conflict of interest. Either you are in Parliament or you are associated with a sports association."
Azad told a press conference that the CBI had written to the DDCA on December 12, seeking its audit report between 2013-14 and alleged that such tactics were meant to delay the inquiry .
Jaitley and DDCA have denied his charges with the former referring him as a "Trojan horse", a term used by him time and again to hit back at the senior BJP leader.
Azad alleged that DDCA officials who had no money in
Rs 4 lakh used to be demanded for selecting somebody for one match and Rs 10 lakh for a season, he claimed.
"They must be probed. Their properties should be used for government and social works like housing the 'divyang,' " he said.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi had recently called for using the term 'divyang' instead of 'viklang' for the physically challenged.
He also targeted other sports bodies for alleged irregularities and claimed that funds meant for corporate social responsibility were given to them. He alleged that Coal India gave Rs 15 crore to Hockey India and the latter was using the money to give prize to "outsiders".