Court issues Letter Rogatory to Mauritius

NEW DELHI, Oct 7:  A special court today issued a Letter Rogatory (LR) to the competent authority in Mauritius to assist the CBI in its ongoing probe into the Rs 3,600 crore VVIP chopper deal case, after the agency said it was required for a just decision in the matter.
Special CBI Judge Ajay Kumar Jain allowed a plea filed by the probe agency in which it had sought the issuance of a LR (a letter of formal request from a court to a foreign court) for investigation and collection of documents in Mauritius in connection with the case.
“Let the LR be issued to the competent authority, Mauritius for obtaining original/authenticated documents as given in annexure-I and recording statements of witnesses/ persons as mentioned in annexure-II of the application,” the court said.
The court had on September 24 issued an open non-bailable warrant against British national Christian Michel James, an accused in the case who is absconding, after the CBI said he was needed for questioning to ascertain crucial aspects in the matter.
Former IAF chief S P Tyagi, his cousins — Sanjeev alias Julie, Rajeev alias Docsa and Sandeep, European middlemen Carlo Gerosa, Christian Michel James and Guido Haschke are among 13 individuals named as accused in the CBI FIR.
CBI, in its FIR, has booked all the accused under the provisions of IPC relating to cheating and criminal conspiracy and under the provisions of the Prevention of Corruption Act.
In its FIR, CBI has alleged that during his tenure as the Air Chief, Tyagi, and “with his approval”, the Air Force had “conceded to reduce the service ceiling for VVIP helicopters from 6000 metres to 4500 metres as mandatory”, which it was opposing vehemently on grounds of security constraints and other reasons.
It had claimed that the reduction of service ceiling — the maximum height at which a helicopter can perform normally — had allowed UK-based AgustaWestland to get into the fray as, otherwise its choppers were not qualified for submission of bids. (PTI)