The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Tuesday opposed in a special court the issue of jurisdiction raised by two telecom firms, charge-sheeted in additional spectrum allocation case of 2002, saying the case fell under the ambit of 2G spectrum scam which clear from the orders of the Supreme Court.
Special Public Prosecutor Anand Grover told Special CBI Judge OP Saini that the Apex Court's order coupled with the notification of High Court made it clear that the case related to 2G spectrum.
"The Supreme Court orders coupled with the notification makes it clear what the ambit is. It is clear from the reading of the two Supreme Court orders and a series of orders that it is a 2G spectrum case," he said, adding that the case was being monitored by the Supreme Court.
Observing that the additional spectrum case was not restricted to licences only, Grover said: "There is no doubt that this case relates to spectrum allocation and this court has jurisdiction under section 322 of CrPC and their application should be dismissed."
Senior advocate Sidharth Luthra, who appeared for accused firms M/s Hutchison Max(P) Ltd and M/s Sterling Cellular Ltd, said they never got license in the period from 2001 to 2008, which is under probe by CBI on apex court's direction and were already an existing licensee. "We are a licensee since 1994 and the facts of the 2G case are irrelevant in our case. This is not a case pertaining to 2G spectrum case," he said.