The last days of the state legislature's winter session in Nagpur saw tempers rise, as Civil Supplies Minister Shobha Phadnavis found herself at the centre of a dal purchase scandal. The Congress showered her with accusations of purchasing pulses without inviting tenders and at prices higher than the open market rates. It is not uncommon for an opposition party to rake up this kind of controversy, but then the Congress has been silent for so long. As former minister Ramrao Adik lamented at the beginning of the session: "We seem to forget we are not the ruling party; so many opportunities have slipped by."
Having finally woken up to the opportunity, Congressmen are now making the most of the Rs 28-crore scam and are insisting on a CBI inquiry. They gleefully talk of a murky deal and have distributed photocopies of Phadnavis' conversation with grain traders. The Congress charge: 22,635 metric tonnes of chana dal and 15,000 metric tonnes of tur dal were bought from the National Consumers' Co-operative Federation without inviting tenders, and above the prevailing open market rates. Phadnavis' explanation: the whole exercise was conducted in a hurry to beat the shortage of the commodities and move them out to remote areas through the public distribution system before the festival season.
But the Opposition was not impressed. Neither did it buy the reasoning that the rates were a little over the market price (for instance, tur dal was procured at Rs 32.50 per kg, Rs 2.30 above the market rate) because they included transport charges. Her back-up, a letter from the Union civil supplies minister stating that essential commodities could be purchased from the federation as it functioned under the Central ministry, is also not keeping Congressmen at bay.