When Prime Minister Narendra Modi finally unveils the Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Plan 2015 for Jammu and Kashmir in Srinagar on Saturday, he is likely to find himself in the thick of some embarrassing disclosures about Nirmal Kumar Singh of the BJP, the Deputy Chief Minister in the State, where the party is in alliance with the PDP.
While expectations run high ahead of Mr. Modi’s visit, Mr. Singh’s controversial decisions in the Power Ministry, of which he is in charge, have again turned the attention to the tenuous equations the BJP has with the PDP. From Article 370 to beef, the allies have not been on the same page.
Ripples caused by Mr. Singh’s decisions to transfer over 240 officials within the Ministry of Power Development, red-flagged by Principal Secretary Sundeep Kumar Naik, and attempts to reconstitute the boards of four power companies, which resulted in the intervention of Law Minister Bhasharat Bukhari of the PDP, leading to the abrupt transfer of Mr. Naik, are unlikely to die down in the wake of the Prime Minister’s visit to the Valley.
Put on hold
No explanations have been given for the transfer of engineers. Both decisions have been put on hold, sources in the Law Ministry told The Hindu.
Though it is anybody’s guess what Mr. Modi will finally unveil, the plan is pegged at Rs. 90,000 crore, of which the power sector is likely to grab the lion’s share, roughly 40 per cent.
In a presentation made to the Power Ministry in New Delhi in July this year, the State demanded Rs. 43,850 crore. Power holds the key to the State’s health, and it is this department under the BJP which has seen the controversial decisions taken by Mr. Singh. For one, and as senior bureaucrats in the State observe, Mr. Singh appeared to push the case of the Chennai-based Then India Energy Pvt. Ltd., in a joint venture with Venayak Company of Jammu to produce 100-MW solar energy for the State. The local dailyState Times first reported on the pressure brought to bear upon the Principal Secretary to change the terms of contract, leading to his transfer. Mr. Singh denies this charge.
When contacted, his office said: “The project was conceived and approved by the Science and Technology Ministry when the National Conference was in power.”