Congress spokesperson Manish Tewari said the director of the Vivekananda International Foundation, Gen (retd) N C Vij, and other retired senior personnel of the Armed Forces had been indicted by a committee appointed by a court for their role in the scam.
"It would be in the fairness of things that a Special Investigating Team reporting directly to the Bombay High Court is constituted to probe the question of criminal culpability and then only would the entire facts of the matter emerge," he told reporters.
The Congress leader said the Vivekananda Foundation was almost an extension of the government as it had contributed two senior bureaucrats to the Prime Minister's Office.
"So, a question arises that given these observations and recommendations contained in the Enquiry Report, a free and fair investigation is in order to establish criminal culpability and I stress upon the word 'criminal culpability'," he said.
The most "giving indictment" in the enquiry report, he said, was that the entire hierarchy was "acutely aware that the Chief of the Army Staff himself had a vested interest in the matter".
The report said since these officers had retired and more than three years had elapsed after their retirement, the provisions of the Army Act did not apply to them.
It had to be seen if the security of the Colaba Military Station had been compromised, he added.
On a question about a criminal probe against former Congress CM Ashok Chavan, he said the case was investigated by the CBI and a chargesheet had already been filed.
"If you rewind... The day these allegations emerged, the first thing which the Congress party leadership did was to request the then Chief Minister (Chavan)to step down," he said.
Tewari said after that not only was there a criminal investigation, a Commission of Enquiry was also constituted by the Maharashtra government.
These indictments, he stressed, had been made "by a Committee which was constituted on the directions of that court by this Government", and not just by "anybody".
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