As the family of late IAS officer Anurag Tiwari and the Opposition raised questions over the "mystery" surrounding his death, Siddaramaiah shot off a letter to Adityanath seeking probe by a "competent team" of investigators.
"It is very important that the whole incident including the circumstances leading to and the cause of death is thoroughly investigated by a competent team of investigators and professionals," Siddaramaiah said.
He requested Adityanath to direct the authorities concerned to "do the needful."
Tiwari, a 2007-batch IAS officer serving as commissioner of the Food, Civil Supplies & ConsumerAffairs Department, was found dead under mysteriouscircumstances by a roadside in Lucknow's Hazratganj area on May 17 morning.
Speaking to the reporters earlier, Siddaramaiah said, "He (Tiwari) was a Karnataka officer, he died there (Lucknow). We don't know what the reason is. Post-mortem report says death was due to cardiac arrest. Let them (UP police) do any inquiry, government will give all cooperation."
Asked about the suspicions that Tiwari may have been murdered because he was probing into a scam involving the food department, he said, "Don't say all thesethings just because someone is saying it. Let theminvestigate, everything will be known."
Tiwari's father B N Tiwari has alleged his son was eliminated, while his brother Mayank has demanded a CBI probe into the matter.
"My son was very honest. Corrupt officers did not like him. They must have somehow got him murdered," he had said.
The Karnataka government had on May 17 sent two senior officials to Lucknow to get details of Tiwari's death.
Speaking to reporters in Chitradurga, state BJPPresident B S Yeddyurappa demanded a CBI probe into the case.
"His (Tiwari's) brother has said he wasmurdered as he was unearthing about Rs 2,000 crore scam in theFood department. The chief minister has to take direct responsibility for this," he said.
"If the chiefminister is honest, he has to order a CBI enquiryor else the Uttar Pradesh chief minister will do it."
BJP MP Shobha Karandlaje, who has spoken to Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath about the case, has also written to him for a second time since the incident took place, expressing suspicion of foul play behind Tiwari's death.
Reminding him of her May 17 letter requesting a thorough probe as the tragedy looks "murky," Karandlaje in her letter today, said "Now I am getting information from credible sources that Tiwari could be a victim of food grain smuggling mafia. This is what middle-level officials in Karnataka government are discussing among themselves in hushed tones."
This is one important angle whichneeds to be probed, she said
Citing similar fears expressed by Tiwari's brothers, Karandlaje said the matter warrants a CBI investigation since the entire episode involves two states.
Tiwari, who had also served as deputy commissioner in Bidar and Kodagu districts in the past was staying at Meera Bai guest house with a batch mate after attending amid-career training programme at Lal Bahadur Shastri NationalAcademy of Administration in Mussoorie.
Expressing grief over the officer's death, KarnatakaFood and Civil Supplies Minister U T Khader had said Tiwari had sought permission for the programme and had again sought extension on May 10.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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