Karnataka cabinet takes serious note on contractor allegations, SIT to investigate further

ANI April 11, 2025 209 views

The Karnataka government has launched a comprehensive investigation into widespread allegations of corruption in public works projects. Minister HK Patil announced the formation of a Special Investigation Team to probe significant irregularities involving 1,729 projects. BJP leader R Ashoka has sharply criticized the government, claiming ministers are turning their offices into "collection centres" instead of development hubs. The probe comes after detailed complaints from the Karnataka State Contractors Association about payment disparities and middlemen interference.

"In Vidhana Soudha, the chambers of all the ministers are the collection centres" - R Ashoka, BJP Leader
Bengaluru, April 11: Karnataka Minister HK Patil, addressing the media on Friday, revealed that the state cabinet has taken serious note of the allegations made by the Karnataka Contractors' Association regarding several public works projects. The allegations were detailed in a commission report submitted to the government and reviewed by the cabinet.

Key Points

1

Cabinet orders Special Investigation Team to examine contractor allegations

2

1,729 public works projects under scrutiny

3

Irregularities found in government project funding and execution

Patil stated, "21 decisions have been made and resolutions passed. The Karnataka Contractors' Association had made allegations. They have submitted a commission report to the government. That report has been presented. The report was discussed in the cabinet. Out of 3 lakh works, 1,729 works have had several allegations made against them. The cabinet has taken serious note of this."

He went on to highlight irregularities in some projects: "In some cases, lesser grants were released, but more work was done. In some places, more grants were released, but less work was done."

The Minister added that the cabinet has recommended the formation of a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to probe these allegations and suggested that action should be taken within the next two months.

Patil further explained Nagamohan Das's involvement; he had been tasked with investigating the contractors' complaints in detail. "Today, the report of Nagamohan Das, who went into the details of the complaints lodged by contractors, has been submitted. He found several serious lapses. We have decided to constitute an SIT to investigate further and find the truth," Patil said.

Ahead of this, responding to allegations of the Karnataka State Contractors Association following growing interference by middlemen in government departments, BJP leader and LoP R Ashoka said that it is 200 per cent correct and there is no doubt at all.

Aiming at the Karnataka government, the BJP leader further alleged that the chambers of ministers have become "collection centres " as they no longer remain work or development centres. "It's 200 per cent correct. There is no doubt at all. In Vidhana Soudha, the chambers of all the ministers are the collection centres, not the work centre or development centre," R Ashoka told reporters.

Sharpening his attacks, the LoP alleged that ministers "collected money" and sent it to the high command to retain their posts. He said, "They collect the money and send it to the high command because that their post must be retained. Ministers were retained, the deputy CM was retained, and the congress president was retained. There is no development in Karnataka. They are looting the government's money. Congress leaders are also saying this..."

Earlier on Thursday, Karnataka State Contractors Association President R. Manjunath wrote a letter to Chief Minister Siddaramaiah alleging that the state government does not make payments to contractors based on seniority.

In the letter, he mentioned that middlemen's interference between contractors and government departments has increased significantly. He stated that the government is supposed to release payments based on seniority as per the transparency law, but it is not doing so.

"There are a total of 1.5 lakh contractors in the state, out of which 60 per cent are small and medium-level contractors. These contractors are not receiving payments. Only influential contractors are being paid, and Manjunath questions, "How are the rest supposed to survive?," the letter reads.

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Finally some action being taken! These irregularities have been going on for too long. Hope the SIT does a thorough job and holds people accountable. 👏
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Priya M.
The numbers are shocking - 1,729 works with allegations out of 3 lakh? That's still too many. Small contractors struggling while only influential ones get paid is just wrong. Hope this investigation brings real change.
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Sanjay T.
While I appreciate the government taking action, I'm skeptical about the 2-month timeline. These investigations often take longer when dealing with complex financial irregularities. Would rather they take more time and do it right.
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Ananya R.
The BJP leader's comments seem unnecessarily political. Instead of just blaming, all parties should work together to fix this systemic issue. Corruption hurts everyone regardless of party lines.
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Vikram J.
As someone in construction, I can confirm middlemen have become a huge problem. They take cuts at every stage which either delays projects or compromises quality. Glad this is finally getting attention!
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Neha P.
The article could have provided more context about Nagamohan Das's findings. What exactly were the "serious lapses" identified? Transparency in reporting would help citizens understand the gravity of the situation better.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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