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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, February 11, 2001 |
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Tories also 'sponsored' application
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, FEB. 10. Even as Labour politicians are facing flak for
dancing to the Hindujas' tune, it turns out that Tories have been
equally close to them. On Friday, the former Prime Minister, Sir
Edward Heath, a Conservative, admitted that he, along with the
Tory treasurer, Lord Feldman, was one of the sponsors of Mr.
Gopichand Hinduja's passport application in March 1997.
The application was handled by the then Tory Immigration
Minister, Mr. Timothy Kirkhope, who later got a job with the
Hindujas and was with them until he found greener pastures in
Europe.
However by the time Mr. G. P. Hinduja got his passport in
November 1997, the Tories had been thrown out of power and
therefore technically the passport was issued by the Labour
Government.
Whether it simply stamped the passport already cleared by the
Tory administration or made its own decision is not known - but,
according to observers, the overlapping role of the two parties
says something about the Hindujas' ``harmonious'' political
networking.
Sir Edward broke his silence on his links with the Hindujas in a
statement to The Times. He said he first met them when they came
up with the idea of floating a British `Nobel Prize'. He said he
saw nothing wrong in sponsoring Mr. Gopichand Hinduja's passport
application and was critical of the new political correctness
verging on treating the Hindujas as untouchables. ``He had been
living in England for many years and was a very prominent
businessman. There seemed every reason why, if he wanted to
become a British citizen, he should be considered'', he said.
Sir Edward, who was a member of a trust set up by the Hindujas'
at the Cambridge University to give scholarships, reacted sharply
to a Cambridge don's demand that the university should not take
money from the brothers in view of the allegations of sleaze. ``I
don't see why one should object to an organisation which is
helping people from India in particular but also other
countries''. The newspaper pointed out that Sir Edward's
constituency ``received several thousand pounds from the Hindujas
in the 1990s but he said he was not paid for his work for the
trust.''
On Lord Feldman's role, it quoted a Hindujas' spokesman as saying
he had been a ``longstanding family friend going back nearly 30
years'' and that he did not collect any money for the party from
them.'' Given the Tories' own links with the family, it is not
surprising that they have kept a rather low-profile throughout
the passport controversy not pressing it beyond the mandatory
criticism of Labour's ``style''.
`Probe contacts'
Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrat MP, Mr. Norman Baker, who broke
the ``passports-for-favours'' row demanded in the Commons on
Friday that the Hammond inquiry into the affair also look at
``the contacts made between the Hinduja brothers and the members
of the Government and the Opposition and members of this House.''
The brothers had ``carved out'' for themselves areas of
``influence'' in the political system, he said. ``Is that carving
out of influence in our political system legitimate?''
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