New Delhi, March 13
 |
In
comparison, Fallen Heroes was a cakewalk.
In May of last year, when we finished our infamous sting
into match-fixing in cricket, and tediously crafted
a 92-minute investigation from two months of reporting
and more than 40 hours of tape, we thought |
we
had seen the worst kind of complicated story. We had waded
through corruption, sleaze, senseless greed and dirty heroes.
But in no time at all,
in August 2000, just months after
breaking the match-fixing story, we found ourselves embarked
on a story that was a grim reminder that reality is always
uglier than a game.
In the final count, Fallen Heroes was only about
being cheated of some entertainment; Operation West End
is about being cheated of your nationalism. In the cricket
story, there was the betrayal by a group of men who excited
and inspired a hundred million; in Operation West End
there is the betrayal by a group of people who lead a hundred
million. At its worst Fallen Heroes was about losing
games; at its worst Operation West End is about losing
lives.
Operation West End is the frightening story of the
death of India’s last sacred cow: the defence establishment.
It is the story of the suitcase people. The story of nakedly
greedy middlemen, nakedly greedy army officers, and nakedly
greedy politicians. It shows how the cancer of corruption
reaches everywhere and touches everyone. It shows that the
poor innocent soldiers who die for paltry salaries and gaudy
medallions are but fodder for the men who make hundreds
of crores cranking the machinery of Indian defence. Operation
West End is enough reason to lose all hope in the idea
of India.
When
Aniruddha Bahal began work on Operation West End
I did not give the story a chance in hell. After the success
of the cricket story, Bahal had just come off the disappointment
of a major scoop that had fallen through at the very last
minute. With his nose for the great story, for smelling
the rot, he had begun to dig around in defence deals, which
had been the legendary stuff of innuendo, rumour, charge
and counter-charge for years without anyone ever nailing
anyone. Over the years, middlemen had been banned, and as
far as the law of the land was concerned all defence deals
were brokered cleanly over the table, sans payoffs or kickbacks.
(Of course, all of Delhi knows that an entire subculture
of staggering affluence, farmhouses and baroque parties
survives on the defence kickback.)
When we first discussed the story, it was the devastating
and dubious fire at the Bharatpur ammunition depot and the
continuing wrangling over the Kargil fiasco that were the
uppermost drivers in our mind. The idea was to plunge into
the murky depths and see if we could spot anything telling
that could be dragged into the light. Sympathetic to the
armyman, we were irked by the idea of the defence dealer.
The Tehelka Investigation Team (saucily acronymed TIT) or,
more accurately, Bahal and his Falstaffian deputy Mathew
Samuel, began their undercover operation into defence purchases
sometime in the August of 2000. Their gameplan was simple
and logical. Enter at the lowest level of the food chain
- the section officer in defence procurement - and work
your way up the ladder of graft. Eight months into the investigation
we are still astonished at how incredibly high the ladder
goes, and how at every rung there were avaricious men waiting
to pull us up as long as there was money to be had for it.
Eight months later, as we look at the footage of the sting,
we are still astonished at how blinding the greed was that
two rank amateurs with close to no knowledge of defence
hardware, hawking a patently absurd product, could go so
far as to slice open an entire industry of high corruption..
Bahal
and Samuel set out to hawk fictitious hand-held thermal
cameras, under the brand name of a fake company West End.
Using spycams, over a period of seven months, they shot
more than hundred hours of footage. After a point the web
of contacts, posturing and cross-referencing became so intricate
and messy that both of them lived in the constant fear of
having their covers blown. Their stress levels mounted with
every passing week as the tightrope became ever thinner.
I waited every day for them to come and tell me that it
was over, they’d been caught out, seen through. But miraculously
greed had dulled every other sense of those who trafficked
in the defence gravy train..
The cast of characters nailed by Operation West End
is stellar. At the very apex, the BJP President Bangaru
Laxman, who took a one lakh token bribe to facilitate West
End’s prospects. In a revealing meeting, he waited expectantly
for another $30,000, which never came, because we never
had them..
Then Jaya Jaitly, President of the Samata Party, close aide
of Defence Minister George Fernandes, who accepted a bribe
of Rs. 2 lakh. In fact, the tehelka investigation
leaves the Samata Party with not a leg to stand on, as its
treasurer too airs all the sleazy deals of his party with
great pride and glee.
Tragically, the army too covered itself in disgrace as a
slew of generals were caught grubbing for payoffs. Among
those nailed are Lt. Gen. Manjit Singh Ahluwalia, Director-General
Ordnance Supply; Maj. Gen. P.S.K Choudary of Weapon and
Equipment; and Maj. Gen. Murgai, Director Quality Assurance,
who has now retired.
Other senior officers who took bribes include Brig. Iqbal
Singh, Prospective Procurement Officer, through whom all
import purchases pass. Then Brig. Anil Sehgal, deputy director
in the DGOS, when first contacted. And then there was additional
secretary L.M. Mehta, IAS, the number two bureaucrat in
the Defence Ministry.
But the men who cast the most light on defence corruptions
is a breed that the law says just does not exist: the middlemen.
The most prominent of these, who sang like proud canaries
on tehelka’s tapes, are:
Key RSS trustee R.K. Gupta and his son Deepak Gupta one
of the middlemen in the recently concluded Sukhoi deal worth
a staggering Rs. 36,000 crore. He has his fingers in many
pies, boasts of his proximity to the prime minister and
claims to pay Rs 3-4 crore of commission money to the BJP
every month.
R.K. Jain, sole treasurer of the Samata Party, who admitted
to having already made over Rs 50 crore for the Samata Party
through defence deals, and about Rs 10 crore for himself.
Major S.J. Singh, veteran defence middleman, who was involved
with Bofors when they first came to India.
Mohinder Singh Sahni, another veteran dealer, and the honorary
consul general of Belize and his son who is the consul general
of Eritrea (Major Singh was earlier the consul general of
Somalia: it seems to be way to go for defence dealers in
India).
In the course of the investigations, the rogues’ gallery
also ended up providing insights into dozens of shady arms
transactions, as well as the modus operandi of deals. The
Mumbai police has made out a case against Bharat Shah with
just a nebulous Chhota Shakeel audiotape. The Operation
West End tapes are in comparison a literal goldmine
for any law enforcement agency with intent. It took a large
team of excellent professionals several weeks to shape the
story into a four-and-half-hour documentary. If that sounds
long, it may help to know that the first script drafted
by Bahal ran to seven hours. Our rational was clear: Operation
West End’s purpose was not to entertain or engross,
it was to bare open the truth. If it could not be done in
two hours, then it just could not.
That the tehelka investigation went so far is a miracle,
but the truth is that it could have gone even further had
we had the money to throw. Six months into the sting, a
point arrived where all the parties contacted, the suitcase
people, were getting tired and suspicious of being given
just a small fraction of the amounts that had been promised.
Amazingly, we did ultimately manage to get a trial evaluation
letter issued. We could have gone no further for it would
have meant getting in the product to India and submitting
them for trial.
Operation
West End is the ultimate indictment of Indian governance
and ethics. It is the ugly fable of a poor country that
has been completely sold off by its rich and powerful. We
spent eleven lakhs on the story. If we had a little more
money we could have ripped open the entire system end to
end. We were just a group of amateurs, a leanly funded media
organization with limited resources.
Suppose we had been the ISI.