advertisement
Justice MB Shah, who probed the allegations of corruption, including land allocation to Tata Nano project, on Sunday said the charges levelled against the then Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi were "baseless."
The Shah Commission, whose report was tabled in the Gujarat Assembly on 31 March, looked into the allegations which mostly pertained to allotment of land for major industrial and infrastructure projects including nine cases related to Tata Nano plant, Adani Group's Mundra Port and SEZ, and Larsen and Toubro.
According to Shah, government has not done anything wrong in allotting land to such industries.
Congress leaders, including Shaktisinh Gohil and Arjun Modhvaida, had submitted a memorandum to the then President in July 2011, listing 17 allegations of corruption against Modi who was at the helm of affairs in Gujarat.
Modi had set up the panel under retired Supreme Court judge MB Shah in August 2011 to inquire into 15 out of 17 allegations, as remaining two were sub-judice.
According to Shah, those who raised these issues, did not turn up before the Commission to record their statements on many occasions.
Among these 15 allegations, one was regarding irregularities in "Sujalam Sufalam" canal network project. In his observation in the report, Shah left the matter on government instead of giving a clear verdict.
Join The Quint on WhatsApp. Type “JOIN” and send to 9910181818.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)