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The Raj Bhavan official did not confirm about the approval for use of official plane and plan the Governor’s travel schedule
Mumbai: Maharashtra Governor Bhagat Singh Koshyari was denied permission to use a state government aircraft to travel to Dehradun on Thursday, triggering a row and inviting a strong criticism from the opposition BJP which sought an apology over the incident.
Koshyari was scheduled to travel by a state government aircraft to Dehradun, but the permission to use the plane was not granted even as the governor had boarded the aircraft, sources said.
The governor later took a commercial flight to travel to the capital of his home state of Uttarakhand, a statement from the Raj Bhavan said.
The Raj Bhavan secretariat and the state government sought to blame each other for the incident, which added a new chapter in the uneasy ties between the ruling coalition, comprising the Shiv Sena, NCP, Congress, and the governor.
The Raj Bhavan statement said the governor’s secretariat had written to the government authorities seeking permission for the use of the aircraft “well in advance” on February 2.
The office of the chief minister was also informed about it, the statement said.
However, the Maharashtra government said the Raj Bhavan secretariat had been informed a day earlier bythe Chief Minister’s Office (CMO) that approval for use of the official aircraft has not been given.
A statement from the CMO said the state government had taken serious cognisance that the official concerned at Raj Bhavan did not apprise the governor about the communication from the government (denying nod to use the aircraft).
“The Raj Bhavan official did not confirm about the approval for use of official plane and plan the Governor’s travel schedule.
“The Chief Minister has issued directives that responsibility be fixed on the Raj Bhavan official concerned after taking serious cognisance of the developments,” the CMO statement said.
It said the Raj Bhavan secretariat should have confirmed about availability of the official plane since non- approval for same was communicated a day earlier.
“Due to this the Governor had to face inconvenience. The state government is not to be blamed ,” the CMO said.
It admitted that the Raj Bhavan secretariat had sought permission for use of the official plane.
“On February 10, the CMO communicated that no permission was given for use of the plane. The Raj Bhavan secretariat was expected to check on the permission and then bring the governor to the airport,” the CMO statement said.
According to the Raj Bhavan statement, Koshyari is scheduled to preside over valedictory function of the 122nd Induction Training Programme of IAS officers at the Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration at Mussoorie in Uttarakhand on Friday.
He was scheduled to depart from the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport in Mumbai for Dehradun at 10 am on Thursday, the statement said.
Koshyari will travel to Mussoorie from Dehradun.
“Today, on 11th February 2021, the Honble Governor reached the CSIM Airport at 1000 hrs and boarded the government plane. However, the Honble Governor was informed that the permission for the use of Government Aircraft had not been received,” the statement said.
As directed by the governor, tickets for Dehradun were booked for the governor on a commercial aircraft leaving Mumbai at 12.15 pm immediately and accordingly, he left for Dehradun, it said.
While the Shiv Sena said the government had followed all laid-down norms in disallowing the governor to use the state-owned plane, the opposition BJP demanded an apology from the ruling Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) over the incident.
The BJP accused the MVA government of being “egoistic” and indulging in “childish acts”.
Earlier, a source told PTI, “Normally, governors do not wait for the permission to come. He sat in the aircraft. The pilot then said the permission was not given yet.”
When asked about the incident, deputy chief minister Ajit Pawar said he had no clue.
“I will take details on reaching the Mantralaya (state secretariat) and only then will be able to say anything,” the deputy chief minister said.
Meanwhile, former Maharashtra minister and senior BJP leader Sudhir Mungantiwar said the MVA government should apologise for “insulting” the governor.
If the state government has purposefully denied permission, it is a “blot” on the state’s reputation, he said.
“If this embarrassment is not intentional, then the state government should suspend the official who failed to issue the flying permission in time to the governor,” he said.
The government should apologise and avoid further escalation of the issue, Mungantiwar said.
BJP leader and former Maharashtra chief minister Devendra Fadnavis accused the state government of being “egoistic” and indulging in “childish acts”.
He also alleged that the state government has insulted the constitutional post of governor.
“It is an unfortunate incident. Such an incident had never happened in the state earlier. Governor is not a person, it is a designation. People come and go, but the designation stays,” he said.
The governor is the head of the state. In fact, it is the governor who appoints the chief minister and his cabinet, Fadnavis pointed out.
“The government should understand that it is insulting a constitutional post,” he said.
Defending the government, Shiv Sena leader Sanjay Raut said it had followed all norms in disallowing Koshyari to use the state plane for his visit to Dehradun.
Rejecting the BJP’s charge that the government has insulted the governor, Raut told reporters in Delhi that there was no politics involved in the incident.
“We respect the governor. The government has upheld the Constitution…This is what I gather from my conversation with Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray,” he said.
“If the governor wants to use the government plane for private work, then there are some rules and had the government violated those rules, it would have been in the dock,” the Sena MP said.
Notably, state Congress chief Nana Patole on Wednesday said the MVA government has decided to move court over the ‘delay’ by the governor in the appointment of nominated members to the Legislative Council.
The state government recommended 12 names for appointment to the Council under the governor’s quota to Koshyari in the first week of November last year.
In October last year, during the coronavirus lockdown, Koshyari wrote a letter to Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray, asking if the latter had turned “secular” since he denied permission at that time to reopen temples in the state.
The CM later said he does need a “Hindutva certificate” from anyone.
During the pandemic last year, Koshyari also insisted on holding the final year exams of degree students in the state, but Thackeray at that time rejected the demand.
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