Sant Kumar Netam alleged it was done at the behest of Singh and that his personal assistant O P Gupta even offered him money.
However, Gupta dismissed the charge as "baseless" and "unfounded".
Netam had in 2001 complained to the National Commission for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes that Jogi had claimed scheduled tribe status on the basis of forged documents.
"Chief Minister Raman Singh's PA O P Gupta called me to the residence of the CM on July 6 and pressured me to stay out of the matter," Netam told a press conference.
"Gupta first called me on June 30 and told me that the CM wanted to meet me. I reached Raipur the next day, but the meeting didn't happen. Gupta called me again on July 5 and asked me to meet at the residence of the CM the next day," Netam said.
Demanding an impartial probe into the entire episode, he said he would complain to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, BJP president Amit Shah and National Commission for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes chairman Nandkumar Sai about it. He claimed his life was under threat.
Dismissing his claims, Gupta said: "Netam came to meet the chief minister at his residence a few days back on the day when CM meets common people. As Netam had to wait, he left the place disappointed. I don't understand why he is making such allegations. Nothing of the sort he has alleged happened that day," he told PTI.
Besides Netam, BJP leader and chairman of the National Commission for Scheduled Tribes Nandkumar Sai had also moved court on the issue.
The matter later went to the Supreme Court which ordered the state government in October 2011 to constitute a committee to decide the matter.
In January this year, the Chhattisgarh High Court had asked the state government to ensure that the committee gave its report by May 31.
Jogi had served as the first chief minister of Chhattisgarh from November 2000 to November 2003. He was an MLA from Marwahi seat reserved for scheduled tribes.
After about a year, an audio tape containing telephonic talks purportedly between Chief Minister Raman Singh's son-in-law Puneet Gupta, Ajit Jogi, then a Congress leader, and Amit Jogi surfaced, hinting at their alleged involvement in "fixing" the bypoll.
Jogi, who had been sulking for long over being sidelined in the Congress, floated 'Janata Congress Chhattisgarh' last year.
He recently moved the Chhattisgarh High Court against revocation of his caste certificate.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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