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Despite HC order power discoms not cooperating: CAG

They submitted before a bench of Acting Chief Justice BD Ahmed and justice S Mridul that the discoms were not providing documents sought by the CAG after the firms sought that their appeal against the order of the single judge of the high court, directing them to cooperate with the auditor, be heard on 7 March.

The discoms sought an adjournment on the grounds that the matter pertaining to CAG audit of telecom firms is coming before the Supreme Court on Tuesday. On the other hand, advocate Prashant Bhushan, appearing for Delhi government, said that first of all ‘this appeal does not lie as they (discoms) are in contempt of the single judge’s order’.

Senior advocate Aman Lekhi, appearing for CAG, also agreed with Bhushan’s submission that the discoms - Tata Power Delhi Distribution Ltd (TPDDL) and Reliance Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group firms, BSES Rajdhani Power Ltd and BSES Yamuna Power Ltd - are not cooperating with it.

Bhushan and Lekhi sought that the matter be listed before the division bench which is hearing a PIL by a joint association of RWAs who are seeking CAG audit of discoms. The court, however, renotified the matter before it on 24 March.

The court was hearing the intra-court appeal of the three discoms who have challenged the 24 January order of the single judge who had not only refused to stall the CAG audit of the discoms but also asked them to co-operate with the top auditor by furnishing the details sought. The discoms had initially moved the high court against the 7 January decision of the Aam Aadmi Party-led government ordering CAG audit, saying the top auditor is not empowered to scrutinise accounts of private companies.

The three private firms had come into being in 2002 when the then Delhi government decided to privatise power distribution. Delhi discoms are a 51:49 per cent joint venture between private companies and Delhi government.
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