2022 Delhi liquor scam explained

The Delhi Liquor Scam is a political scandal concerning the Delhi Government, which paved its way through the introduction of Delhi's Excise Policy from 2021 to 2022. This policy brought in private firms and enterprise companies into the retail liquor sectors. The allegations involve favouring the owners and shareholders of private sectors, waivers and reduction of license fee and creation of numerous licenses to all the new incoming enterprises, and bribery.[1] The Excise policy 2021–22 created by the ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), projected it as a reform in the excise and retail liquor sector, thereby boosting the revenue by Rs 9,500 crores. This policy mainly focused on moving out the retail sector, and making way to large private sectors and firms. The policy was structured by a group of ministers from the cabinet, and the draft was approved and accepted by the government in March 2021.[2] [3]

When the final draft was brought in front of the Lieutenant Governor Vinai Kumar Saxena for approval, he approved the bill with a condition that new liquor vendors in non-confirmed areas could only be opened upon the permission of the Municipal Corporation of Delhi. In November 2021, a government official from Delhi stated that, "for the first time ever all state-owned liquor shops were going to be shut and is transferred completely to private business players". Later the new policy was withdrawn and the government backed the old policy to be continued for now.[4] [5]

Background

In February 2021, a Group of Ministers led by Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia and Health Minister Satyendra Kumar Jain was organised to look into reforms to the Delhi excise policy, which constituted a committee of experts. The Deputy Chief Minister of Delhi Manish Sisodia, who also holds the Excise portfolio brought in the Delhi's Excise Policy (2021–22). This bill aimed to privatise the sale of liquor in Delhi and cease government involvement in the sale of alcohol. The bill invited private enterprises to enter the field of liquor business, with an aim to boost up the excise department revenue by over a large percentage.[6] The bill ended government ownership of liquor stores, which was replaced by the issuance of store operation licenses given to private companies. It also proposed an increase in the annual license fee from Rs. 8 lakh to 75 lakh. Areas of Delhi were categorized into 32 zones which further included 8–10 wards, each of which would have around 27 outlets. This meant every municipal ward had 2–3 liquor vendors operating in the area.[7]

The government also said that it would eliminate the liquor mafia, and enhance consumer experiences visiting new outlets. There were also guidelines issued for the appearance of the outlets. The private liquor shops were allowed to provide discounts on MRP to attract customers, and were also given provision to deliver liquor until 3 AM. This bill was further sent to the Lieutenant Governor's sign and approval, which was passed by the governor with certain conditions on unauthorized areas set.[8]

Corruption allegations

After the policy's implementation, there were a batch of complaints alleging a “multi-crore scam” in the policy, one of which was filed with the Delhi Police in June 2022 by former Delhi Congress president Chaudhary Anil Kumar.[9] The bill faced severe backlash from the opposition BJP and Congress, stating that the government has sold all the licenses in exchange for money and accused that the government has handed over the Excise department fully to private players and business agencies. The liquor license holders were allegedly given extensions according to their own will. The opposition also accused that the new policies contradicted the excise policies, and businessmen were given an exemption of 30 crores, as per their will. Both the parties also sought intervention from central agencies to investigate the same. Sisodia further added that "849 new outlets were to be opened, including in unauthorized areas under the new policy which even the governor had approved."[10] [11]

In July 2022, Chief Secretary of Delhi, Naresh Kumar, reports procedural violations in the formation of the liquor policy to Saxena, who recommended a CBI probe. These alleged violations were the ignoring of the recommendations of the expert committee and the bypassing of the Lieutenant Governor when implementing the policy. This report alleged losses to the exchequer of up to 580 crore. Another investigation by the Enforcement Directorate alleged that the liquor policy would give liquor wholesalers a guaranteed 12% profit margin in exchange for a 6% kickback paid to AAP ministers. The ED alleged that Jain and Sisodia overruled the decisions of the expert committee and bypassed the Lieutenant Governor in tweaking the policy to include this profit margin, which they alleged was never discussed during the meetings of the Group of Ministers but was instead agreed on as a "collective decision" of the Delhi cabinet. It was further alleged that Vijay Nair, the AAP's communication in charge who was closely interacting with Sisodia about the liquor policy, was paid 100 crore in advance kickback by a "South Group", consisting of Hyderabad-based private entities. Some of the members of this alleged "South group" included former Telangana Chief Minister's K. Chandrashekhar Rao's daughter K. Kavitha and then-Ongole Lok Sabha MP Magunta Sreenivasulu Reddy from ruling YSRCP party in Andhra Pradesh, along with many Hyderabad-based businessmen. In exchange Nair allegedly granted this "South group", which had no foothold in the Delhi liquor business at the time, wholesale licenses and retail license above and beyond the policy's allowance, as well as other "undue favours".

The state opposition BJP also released a "sting operation" video, where father of an FIR accused Sunny Marwah collected money stating it as "excise duty" under the new policy. The BJP IT-cell head Amit Malviya released the video, and voiced large corruption and bribery by officials, and pitched in concerns that the state suffered with middlemen and mafias in the government.[12]

Timeline

2021

2022

2023

Entry of Lieutenant Governor

Manish Sisodia who also heads the excise department accused the governor V K Saxena who had approved the bill earlier without any issues of opening outlets even in unauthorized areas, of "changing stand as per requirements". Further AAP also accused that L-G Saxena exchanged demonetized currency notes worth of ₹1,400 crore while he was chairman of a government Khadi body in 2016. Saxena expressed huge objections stating it to be "baseless" and "deliberately misleading" levelled accusations. He advised the chief minister Arvind Kejriwal and his colleagues to refrain from these "petty behaviors and statements". He also sent legal notice and said that he would sue AAP leaders, by lodging a defamation case against them.[18] [19]

Arrests

On 20 August 2022, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) conducted raids on the Deputy CM Sisodia's residences to determine the series of accusations charged on the government relating to the liquor scam. Raid were also carried out on civil servants and officers related to this issue. The state opposition BJP lauded the agency to bring out the truth and the culprits to be punished. The opposition parties cried foul and vendetta politics by BJP over the raids executed. Kejriwal tweeted "We welcome the CBI and support any type of investigation".[20] [21]

On 6 September 2022, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) carried out raids in 40 locations across the country. As per the officials these raids were carried out on the basis of FIR filed by the CBI, in which Manish Sisodia was named as accused. The premises of private individuals and other government officials linked to these charges were probed and investigated.[22] Vijay Nair, AAP's communications-in-charge, was also arrested that day.

In November 2022, the ED filed a chargesheet against seven accused, alcohol businessmen and Delhi government officials.[23] On 15 December, K. Kavitha was first named in a chargesheet.

On 26 February 2023, Manish Sisodia himself was arrested.[24]

Arvind Kejriwal was arrested on 21 March 2024 following a raid on his home by the Enforcement Directorate, was remanded until 28 March 2024, and remains in the custody of the Enforcement Directorate (ED).[25] He had skipped nine summons from the ED before that.[26] The Delhi High Court dismissed Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal's petition against his arrest.[27] [28] [29] [30] [31]

List of arrests made

So far a total of 17 people have been arrested in this case.

Portrait NamePolitical partyDate of arrest
Arvind KejriwalAam Aadmi Party21 March 2024
K. KavithaBharat Rashtra Samithi15 March 2024
Sanjay SinghAam Aadmi Party4 October 2023
Magunta Raghav Son of Magunta Sreenivasulu ReddyYSR Congress PartyApprover on 3 October 2023
Manish SisodiaAam Aadmi Party26 February 2023
Satyendra Kumar JainAam Aadmi Party30 May 2022

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2022-09-06 . Delhi Excise Scam: ED raids multiple locations across India . 2022-09-06 . mint . en.
  2. Web site: 2022-08-23 . Delhi Excise Policy: NDMC to Bring Censure Motion in Aug 24 Meeting . 2022-09-06 . News18 . en.
  3. News: 2022-08-06 . Delhi Excise Policy Aam Aadmi Party alleges 'corruption' in change of decision by Centre's LG; seeks CBI probe . en-IN . The Hindu . 2022-09-06 . 0971-751X.
  4. Web site: 2022-08-31 . Explained: All about Delhi reverting to its old liquor policy from Sept 1 . 2022-09-06 . The Indian Express . en.
  5. Web site: Munish Chandra . Pandey . August 25, 2022 . High on liquor policy: Retail margins up by 989 per cent under Delhi's new excise rules, show probe papers . 2022-09-06 . India Today . en.
  6. Web site: An . Abhishek . August 8, 2022 . Individual licensees not reopening shops adds to Delhi's liquor crisis . 2022-09-06 . India Today . en.
  7. Web site: Delhi's liquor policy: Customers may get discounts even as old excise regime kicks in from September 1 . 2022-09-06 . DNA India . en.
  8. Web site: Explained How the controversy over the Delhi Liquor Policy unfolded . 2022-09-06 . The New Indian Express.
  9. Web site: 2024-03-23 . Congress's Kejriwal dilemma deepens as it balances ties with AAP – friends in Delhi, foes in Punjab . 2024-04-01 . The Indian Express . en.
  10. News: 2022-09-05 . BJP's Anurag Thakur calls AAP 'bewdi sarkar' amid Delhi liquor scam faceoff . 2022-09-06 . Business Standard India.
  11. Web site: 2022-09-05 . BJP cites sting to claim 'crores in commission' given to AAP leaders . 2022-09-06 . The Indian Express . en.
  12. Web site: September 5, 2022 . Himanshu . Mishra . BJP shares sting video, claims Manish Sisodia got kickbacks in liquor policy scam . 2022-09-06 . India Today . en.
  13. News: 2024-03-16 . Delhi excise policy scam: From policy to proceedings . 2024-04-02 . The Times of India . 0971-8257.
  14. Web site: The Wire: The Wire News India, Latest News,News from India, Politics, External Affairs, Science, Economics, Gender and Culture . 2024-04-02 . thewire.in.
  15. News: PTI . 2022-09-01 . Delhi reverts to old excise policy, government-run liquor vends open . 2024-04-02 . The Hindu . en-IN . 0971-751X.
  16. Web site: Nallella . Prathyush . 2024-03-16 . Timeline of BRS MLC Kavitha's Involvement in Liquorgate . 2024-04-02 . . en.
  17. Web site: 2023-03-06 . Delhi excise policy case: Timeline of how Manish Sisodia landed in jail . 2024-04-02 . Hindustan Times . en.
  18. Web site: 2022-09-05 . Delhi L-G Saxena sends legal notice to AAP leaders for defamation . 2022-09-06 . Hindustan Times . en.
  19. Web site: Zee News: Latest News, Live Breaking News, Today News, India Political News Updates . 2022-09-06 . Zee News . en.
  20. Web site: 2022-08-20 . CBI Raids on Manish Sisodia: Modi government has no tolerance for corruption . 2022-09-06 . The Indian Express . en.
  21. Web site: 2022-08-20 . 'All CBI officers were…': Manish Sisodia on 'behaviour' after raid at his house . 2022-09-06 . Hindustan Times . en.
  22. Web site: 2022-09-06 . Delhi excise policy case: ED raids over 30 locations across the country . 2022-09-06 . The Indian Express . en.
  23. Web site: Court accepts CBI chargesheet in Delhi liquor case, issues summons to all accused . 2024-04-02 . India Today . 15 December 2022 . en.
  24. Web site: Manish Sisodia's one year in jail in Delhi excise policy case rife with legal setbacks . 2024-04-02 . India Today . 26 February 2024 . en.
  25. News: Mahajan . Satvika . Tewari . Samridhi . High drama in Delhi as AAP, BJP hold protests . 29 March 2024 . The Hindu . 26 March 2024.
  26. News: Kakkar . Shruti . 20 March 2024 . "Why don't you appear on receiving ED summons": Delhi HC asks Arvind Kejriwal . Hindustan Times . 24 March 2024.
  27. Web site: Jaiswal . Arushi . 1 April 2024 . CM Arvind Kejriwal will not resign, to run government from jail: AAP . 1 April 2024 . . en.
  28. News: 28 March 2024 . Can Arvind Kejriwal run govt from jail? Experts have different opinions . 1 April 2024 . The Times of India . 0971-8257.
  29. Web site: "Judges Not Bound By Politics": High Court Dismisses Arvind Kejriwal's Petition . 9 April 2024 . NDTV.com.
  30. Web site: Anand . Akriti . 'Arvind Kejriwal's arrest in liquor case valid': Delhi HC rejects CM's plea . mint . 9 April 2024 . 11 April 2024.
  31. Web site: Ojha . Srishti . Arvind Kejriwal's plea against arrest dismissed, court says he 'conspired' . India Today . 9 April 2024 . 11 April 2024.