A Parliamentary panel's sub group examining "irregularities" in Commonwealth Games 2010 today recommended calling Cabinet Secretary P K Sinha and PMO officials from Prime Minister's Office for field surveys of assets created during the event.
"Officials from six other ministeries---MHA, Finance, Sports, Urban Development, Health, Social Justice and Empowerment --will be called besides the present Cabinet Secretary as well as officials from the present PMO," a sources said.
The issues were deliberated at the first meeting of a five-member sub-committee of Parliament's Public Accounts Committee. While the PAC is headed by Congress leader K V Thomas, Shantaram Naik, Congress MP from Rajya Sabha is the convenor of the sub-committee, which has to finalise report on irregularities in the 19th Commonwealth Games.
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The panel's sub-Committee was constituted on September 4 with S S Ahluwalia, Nishikant Dubey and Vijay Goel (BJP) and Bhartruhari Mahtab (BJD) as members.
The PAC, which was earlier headed BJP veteran Murli Manohar Joshi had given a draft report.
The CAG had criticised the then Manmohan Singh government's decisions saying it led to huge escalation in cost and pointed out a hurried approach at the last minute, which led to many descrepancies.
The CAG report had also alleged that the main bid document of the Games were tampered with and had questioned the authenticity of the expenditure of the Games.
Indications are that the final report by the PAC will not be ready before March 31 and hence could be pressented only in the Budget session next year.
"The sub committee today felt that more sittings are required to finalize the fresh draft because in the last five years lots of changes have taken place. CBI has closed some of the cases out of 33 it scrutinized.
"There is also a need to update the status report of the government like how many assets were created and what is their status five years after the game. Field visits are also required to ascertain this," sources said.
They said it was felt that it will be not appropriate to call officials from the previous PMO.
When contacted, Naik refused to give a time frame by which the report will be ready but said, "this was the first meeting of the committee. A number of meetings are going to happen in future as well.