Ranchi, Nov 13 (Inditop.com) A former Jharkhand bureaucrat claims that in 2007 then chief minister Madhu Koda had pressurised him to push files recommending iron ore mines to a company belonging to his close associate Vinod Sinha.

“When you work in a system, instructions are passed to officers. Even I was instructed by Madhu Koda on several occasions to push mine-related files,” Jay Shankar Tewary, then mines and geology secretary, told Inditop.com over phone from Patna.

Tewary held the post from January 2007 to July 2008, when he retired. He now lives in the Bihar capital.

“I know Vinod Sinha. He used to put pressure through Koda,” said Tewary.

The Income Tax (IT) department has issued arrest warrants against Sinha and Sanjay Chaudhary – both close associates of Koda – and all three are accused in the Rs.2,500 crore money laundering scam in Jharkhand.

Tewary said in late 2007, “Koda had cleared a file recommending iron ore mine contracts to Core Steel company”, which it turned out was floated by Sinha. The file, however, never went through.

“We held up the file after we came to know that it was Vinod Sinha’s company,” claimed Tewary. Sources in the department, however, say Core Steel finally withdrew its file.

“During my tenure as mines and geology secretary, we recommended mine allocation to national and international steel players. The small steel players tried to influence us by putting pressure through Koda,” said Tewary.

“To cope with the small players, I recommended to the state government that iron ore mines should be allocated to small players through the Jharkhand State Mineral Development Corporation (JSMDC) and National Mineral Development Corporation (NMDC).

“My recommendations were turned down by the state government,” said Tewary.

Tewary even spoke of Koda wanting contracts for Chiriya Mines, which have the world’s best quality iron ore deposits, to go to private players.

“The state government had stated that SAIL should keep one third for its requirement and the rest should be awarded to the state government for private players’ use,” said Tewary.

It was also reported that 40 mine-related files were disposed of in one hour during Koda’s tenure.

“It was not an hour, rather a day during which the applications of interested parties were disposed of. Around 40 parties had appeared and their applications were disposed of,” said Tewary.

He said this was done on the day he joined as mines and geology secretary – the very day when he left for the 2007 Punjab assembly elections as an observer.

“The election commission takes your services for a fixed tenure and I was coming and going back to Punjab in February 2007.”

According to Tewary, during his predecessor S.K. Sathapathy’s tenure as mines and geology secretary, applications were invited for a mine from interested parties. Around 60 parties applied for iron ore mines and Sathapathy called them for a presentation.

Then Sathapathy, who had the image of an honest officer, was transferred and B.K. Tripathy, another senior IAS officer, was named for the post. But Tripathy refused to join and it was then that Tewary joined as secretary in the department.