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Haryana decides to recommend CBI probe against Khemka

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Press Trust of India Chandigarh
In fresh trouble for Ashok Khemka, the whistleblower IAS officer who had questioned Robert Vadra-DLF land deals, Haryana Government today decided to recommend a CBI probe into alleged irregularities by him in a Rs eight-crore deal of state warehousing corporation.

Haryana Chief Secretary S C Chaudhary said this evening that the decision was taken after Khemka was "prima facie" found guilty in a departmental inquiry into the 2009 deal when he was Managing Director of the Corporation.

"The state government has decided to handover to CBI for enquiry in the allegations made by (one) Ravinder Kumar in the matter of allotment of work to an Ahmadabad based company for installing galvalume roofing sheets on warehouses Mr. Ashok Khemka during his tenure as Managing Director, Haryana State Warehousing Corporation in 2009," he said in a statement here.
 

The Chief Secretary said that the complaint which was received on August 9, 2013 had been forwarded to the Agriculture Department "which had prima facie found truth in the allegations and recommended independent probe".

The complainant had also demanded probe by an CBI agency, Chaudhary said adding, "Hence, the state government has decided to handover the probe to CBI."

Khemka, an IAS officer of 1991 batch, came into limelight after he cancelled mutation of land deal between UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi's son-in-law Robert Vadra and realty giant DLF in 2012.

The government had issued a charge sheet against Khemka for "wrongly" cancelling the mutation.

Though Khemka could not be contacted today he had sometime back sent a detailed letter to Haryana chief secretary dismissing the charges against him.

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First Published: Jan 18 2014 | 7:20 PM IST

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