Marks Card Scam: NSUI backtracks a day after targeting Congress Minister

Bengaluru: The ruling Congress was left red-faced here on Wednesday, after Higher Education Minister Basavaraj Rayareddy was criticised by his own party’s student wing — the National Students’ Union of India (NSUI) — which accused his office of being party to a multi-crore marks card scam. The NSUI yesterday, however, modified its statement and said that the Minister was not a party to the scam.

NSUI State President H.S. Manjunath Gowda submitted a memorandum to K.C. Venugopal, AICC General Secretary in-Charge of Karnataka, and demanded that the Minister be instructed to withdraw the order placed for purchase of marks cards for various Universities.

He said that Rayareddy’s office had shown “undue favour” to a private vendor based in Mumbai by asking the Government-owned Mysore Sales International Ltd. (MSIL) to source marks cards from this firm by violating the tender rules under the Karnataka Transparency in Public Procurement Act.

The Mumbai-based vendor is a broker of MSIL and is involved in selling fake marks cards/certificates of our Universities in other States, he alleged. Though the actual market rate of such quality marks cards and certificates is in the range of Rs.8 and Rs.12, MSIL is charging Rs. 36.5 plus taxes.

The actual printing cost is Rs. 4 per marks card, whereas MSIL is charging over Rs. 35. Both put together, MSIL is charging over Rs. 90 per marks card, the memorandum said.

NSUI backtracks

Meanwhile, NSUI has clarified that Rayareddy had little role to play in the scam, a day after blaming him for supporting it. “If the Minister had a 10% role to play in this, officials have 90%,” NSUI President Manjunath clarified. “We wanted to highlight the difficulty students are facing, since there are lots of fake certificates being generated. Officials and Vice-Chancellors of Universities have colluded. It was done without the Minister’s knowledge,” he said.

The petition submitted to the party leadership, however, stated that the scam was supported by the Higher Education Minister’s Office and “the present Minister.” The petition also said that the previous Minister (R.V. Deshpande) had rejected the idea in January 2016, whereas “the present Minister has forcefully done it.”

‘NSUI President asked me to pass failed VTU students’

Higher Education Minister Basavaraj Rayareddy, dismissing allegations of facilitating irregularities in the purchase of paper for marks cards, said that he was being framed because he had a personal difference with the NSUI President Manjunath Gowda.

Rayareddy said, “Manjunath Gowda had met me requesting to pass over 100 VTU students who failed and I had refused to do so. He tried to put pressure on me in various ways; as I did not bend, he framed false allegations.”

Rayareddy also suspects the role of paper supply contractors behind the allegations against him. He said that the State Government does not take decisions regarding the printing of marks cards at State Universities.

The decision to get it done through MSIL was decided in a meeting of Karnataka State Council for Higher Education where representatives of all Universities were present.

This post was published on December 8, 2017 6:51 pm