The Congress president had challenged the IT department's authority to reopen his tax assessment related to the National Herald and the Young India transactions.
Union
Textiles Minister Smriti
Irani on Tuesday launched a scathing attack on the Congress over
former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Raghuram Rajan's remarks
that most bad loans that account for Indian banks' Non Performing
Assets (NPA) originated during the United Progressive Alliance's
(UPA) regime between 2006 and 2008.
Addressing
a presser here, Irani said, "Rajan's statement proves that it is
the Congress who is responsible for the increased NPA. Sonia Gandhi
led a government that attacked the very core of the Indian banking
system."
The
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader's comments come in the wake of
Rajan's written statement in response to a parliamentary panel who
sought his views on the current situation of India's banking sector,
especially the NPA crisis.
Rajan
stated that during the period, "too many loans were made to
well-connected promoters who have a history of defaulting on their
loans," adding that sanctioning the loans were a "historic
phenomenon of irrational exuberance."
The
former RBI governor said that while private sector banks were running
out of such promoters, the public sector banks continued financing
them. Rajan blamed the public sector banks for lacking alertness
while sanctioning the loans.
Irani
also cornered Congress president Rahul
Gandhi, UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi and Priyanka Vadra for their
involvement in the National Herald scam.
"Their
efforts were focused on looting the taxpayers' money. Rahul Gandhi's
not-for-profit company, Young India, acquired a commercial company
called Associated Journals Limited (AJL). Why a company that is not
supposed to be involved in profit or loss making, bought a commercial
company?" asked Irani.
The
Income Tax (IT) department had informed the Delhi High Court that the
All India Congress Committee had allegedly transferred funds to the
tune of Rs 99 crore to the Associate Journal Ltd, adding that Rahul
had allegedly willfully chosen not to disclose the fact that he held
the director's post in the Young India.
The
Congress president had challenged the IT department's authority to
reopen his tax assessment related to the National Herald and the
Young India transactions. On Monday, however, the pleas challenging
the IT department's notice seeking tax reassessment for the financial
year 2011-2012 were rejected by the court.
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