The government’s tardiness to take advantage of the German offer is inexplicable. It is also very unfair. It might be recalled that in the Bofors investigation while the CBI was hounding Mr Ottavio Quattrocchi it sent letters rogatory, among other tax havens, to Liechtenstein. The CBI was trying to locate the bank accounts into which Mr Quattrocchi was suspected to have transferred slush funds from Swiss banks after the Bofors case erupted. Indeed, even Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyer, while discussing the Bofors case in Parliament, claimed:"We reached the stage where we have been able to identify Mr Quattrocchi as a man who has received some of themoney."
Nevertheless, despite many years no case against Mr Quattrocchi has been made. He has therefore justifiably claimed that he is being unduly harassed by the government and by media. With news of the fresh German offer, inevitably public attention will be redrawn to him. That could create possibly much unhealthy speculation. It becomes incumbent for the UPA government therefore to promptly accept the German offer. It must release all the names of the LTG Bank secret account holders. To avoid another round of possibly unwarranted harassment of Mr Quattrocchi, that is the least the government can do.