Lavalin case: Pinarayi Vijayan 'wrongly picked', no need to face trial, says Kerala High Court

Written By PTI | Updated: Aug 23, 2017, 05:54 PM IST

The CBI had said Pinarayi Vijayan was involved in corruption in awarding a contract to the Canadian firm SNC-Lavalin when he was power minister in 1996.

Special judge ruled CBI had failed to prove the charges of conspiracy and corruption levelled against Kerala Chief Minister Vijayan and other accused.

Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan has won a lengthy court battle, again.

The senior Left leader, who was let off by the special CBI court in the Rs 374 crore Lavalin graft case in 2013, was discharged by the Kerala High Court again on Wednesday.

In what can be called an embarrassment for the CBI, the court said that the Chief Minister was 'wrongly-picked' and there was no need for him to face the trial.

Justice P Ubaid, who also upheld the discharge of two others in the Rs 374.50-crore graft case, rejected the CBI's plea that their full-fledged trial was necessary to prove the conspiracy.

The court gave its verdict in a revision petition filed by the CBI in the Kerala High Court in 2014 challenging the discharge of Vijayan and six others in the case by a special CBI court in Thiruvananthapuram.

The CBI special court, Thiruvananthapuram, had in November 2013 discharged Vijayan and others in the case of alleged corruption in awarding a contract to the Canadian firm SNC-Lavalin when Vijayan was power minister in 1996 that allegedly caused a loss of Rs 374.50 crore to the state Exchequer.

"The CBI wrongly picked and chose Pinarayi Vijayan without any material in the case," the judge said today.

The CBI, which had filed the charge sheet in the case, had argued that there was sufficient evidence to prove the charges against the accused.

The discharge by the special court was 'illegal', CBI had stated in its revision petition.

The special judge had ruled that the CBI had failed to prove the charges of conspiracy and corruption levelled against Vijayan and other accused.

The CBI had in March argued before the court that a trial was must to prove the conspiracy in giving the contract to revamp the power projects to the Canadian firm when Vijayan was power minister in 1996.

Claiming that the conspiracy was hatched at different stages in awarding the contract, the CBI had assailed the lower court order discharging Vijayan and six others and said a full-fledged trial was necessary to prove the conspiracy.

In a criminal case, the actual trial begins only after framing of charges in the case by the court on the basis of prima facie evidence existing against the accused.

The accused is discharged by the court in absence of any such evidence.