India's telecom minister resigned on Sunday, amid scrutiny over his role in an alleged spectrum allocation scam that is claimed to have cost the government $38 billion.
Minister A. Raja handed his resignation to prime minister Manmohan Singh, telling reporters that he had done so on the advice of Singh and Tamil Nadu party leader M. Karunanidhi.
Raja is alleged to have issued 2G licenses in January 2008 at prices well below market value. But he said he was confident the inquiries into the process would clear his name.
In a statement mailed to local media, Karunanidhi said that while Raja had followed the spectrum allocation procedures in place since 1999, some opposition party members were planning to “create a situation of bringing everything to a standstill” by disrupting parliament until Raja was ousted.
Investigations have allegedly uncovered documents suggesting that senior DoT officials collaborated with some private companies to ensure they received spectrum licenses.
The licenses had also been awarded on a first-come-first-serve basis, at prices set in 2001, and the process had been set up to limit the number of applicants. But regulator Trai had recommended the spectrum be allocated though an open auction process.
The allegations are being investigated by government auditor CAG, and are the subject of a supreme court battle, due to start today.
CAG is said to have concluded that the decision not to pursue an open auction could have cost the government up to 1.72 trillion rupees ($38.41b).
India's 3G auction this year raised nearly $15 billion.
Opposition parties - including the AIADMK party which had been leading calls for Raja's resignation - welcomed the move but said the probes need to continue, the Hindusaid.
In an interview with the Economic Times, Telenor CEO Jon Fredrik Baksaas said it should be up to its partner Unitech to clear the name of the Uninor JV, which is being investigated for its role in the process, but which Telenor only entered after the allocation had concluded.
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