Today's blog is about a shocking lack of transparency, seemingly deliberate, involving one of the premier Regiments of the Indian Army, 61 Cavalry and its association with Army Polo and Riding Club and Indian Polo Association. This continuing opaqueness about the functioning of these organisations raises questions of morality and ethics and
has been continuing unchecked right under the nose of the top brass
of the Army. It primarily concerns the activities of the Army Polo and Riding Club
(APRC) which is utilizing all facilities of the Army without having any legal sanction
and without its accounts ever coming under the scrutiny of the the Defence accounts
Department.
To begin with, the APRC is neither registered as a society nor as a company
but it is functioning since 1995 as an unregistered body under the control of
the Indian Army. The Chief of Army Staff was the President of this Club till
May 2013. After that Quarter Master General of the Indian Army is the President
of this Club. This change in the leadership occurred on the basis of the
application filed under RTI Act 2005 to CPIO of Indian Army to know the status
of the Army Polo and Riding Club. In response to the RTI Application, CPIO
informed that Army Polo and Riding Club is not a Public Authority, so no
information can be given regarding the functioning of the Army Polo and Riding
Club.
This reply, thus, makes it clear that despite enjoying all
the facilities of the Army and having senior Army officers as its office bearers,
the APRC has been deliberately kept outside the purview of a public authority.
This raises serious questions about the motive to keep it out of the ambit of
public scrutiny.
However, the Army’s reply regarding APRC not being a public
body may not stand legal scrutiny. Consider this-To begin with APRC is located
in the premises of the ‘B’ Squadron of 61 Cavalry of Indian Army and a serving
Colonel of the 61 Cavalry, its Commandant, is the Chief Executive Officer of
the Army Polo and Riding Club. The sources and resources of the Indian Army are
fully used for the functioning of the APRC.
The APRC organizes polo season every year from October 15 to
December 8. Interestingly, the Club allows team whose players are playing
members of the Indian Polo Association (IPA) through a Club or Associations
affiliated to IPA. IPA itself is presently not a recognized sports body by the
Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports. The matches are played at the Army
Equestrian Centre in Delhi Cantonment, which is located in an area allotted to
Army by Defence Estates. The matches are held at Jaipur Polo Ground in Delhi Cantonment which is
given on lease By the Ministry of Poverty and Urban Development to Indan Polo
Association on long lease. Despite this clear use of Army resources, the Army
claims in its RTI reply that the APRC is not a public authority which flies in
the face of the definition of public authority under the RTI Act 2005.
Not only Indian but even foreign teams are permitted to
participate in the polo matches organised by the APRC. The club is not
exclusively for personnel of Indian Army but also have
civilians and foreigners as its member. For a civilian to be the member of the
Army Polo and Riding Club he has to purchase an Admission form (price printed
on the form is Rupees 50/-) but it is given for Rupees 150/. The membership
fees per person is Rs 50,000. How and under which rule civilians are made the
members and how their admission and monthly subscription is decided, no one is
aware about it. The basic issue concerning the membership of APRC is whether the
Army, being a government body, can allow membership to civilians and
foreigners.
The APRC also takes sponsorship from corporate houses for
organizing polo matches. The sponsorship amount is in lakhs for different
matches. The prominent sponsors of this year are Yes Bank, Royal Salute of
Chivas Brother, Jack Daniels and they have given the contract to Equisports
Management Private Limited for getting the sponsorships for polo matches.
Equisports management is also managed by some members of APRC. There is no
independent audit of the funds collected for the sponsorships and all audit is
through an internal auditor of the APRC.
Needless to say, the counting procedures are in gross
contravention to orders, thus undermining the image of the Services.
The
intertwined relationship of the APRC and the IPA can be gauged from the fact
that the Commandant of the 61 Cavalry, Colonel Navjot Singh Sandhu, is also the
Honorary Secretary of the Indian Polo Association (IPA). The IPA is a society
registered as a ‘welfare body’ and
not as a sports association under Section 20 of Societies and Registration Act
1860. Legal experts say there is no provision for a sports body to be
registered under the Section 20 of Societies and Registration Act 1860.
IPA itself
is not recognized by the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports Affairs which is
the main body looking after sports in India. The fund collected by IPA
are used for the overseas visits of the Chief of Army Staff (COAS) and other
senior members of the Indian Polo Association and Army Polo And Riding Club.
During the year 2010-2011 as per the balance sheet of the IPA, Rs 18 Lacs were
spent on the visit of then COAS to Argentina. It is also surprising
that though IPA and APRC is responsible for the promotion of Equestrian sports
and they have not been to able to train any individual or team for Asian or
Olympics meet.
Interestingly,
there is another organization in the name of Army Equestrian Centre, fully
controlled by the Indian Army and an Army Establishment operating from the
Defence lands and public funds to the tune of Rs 11,85,3000 have been allocated to it by the Army headquarters. It conducts
training and tournaments for Army Polo players and provides venue for the IPA events. This organization provides
venue/infrastructure facilities/polo grounds for the IPA and APRC events and it
is directly under the control of Quarter Master General’s Branch of the Indian
Army. The access to civilians is permitted for the events of IPA. Foreigners
can use these facilities under special permission of the Army authorities.
IPA collects
funds as subscription fees from members, clubs and spends money as per the
liking of Honorary Secretary and Army Polo and Riding Club get sponsorships
for IPA for polo matches and other events. All this leaves enough funds at the
discretion of Honorary Secretary and Chief Executive Officer, who in the present
case is the Commanding Officer of the 61 Cavalry.
The Ministry
of Youth Affairs and Sports generally gives grants to the different Sports
Federation of India and in its order dated 21 April, 2010, it directed all sports
bodies to bring transparency in the functioning of Sports Federation by
appointing Public Information Officer for RTI Act, failing which no grants will
be given. Amazingly, IPA refused to follow the transparency and did not appoint
a PIO without caring for the grants and had refused to take any grants since
2010. It might be argued that the IPA chose not to receive grants in order to
avoid appointing a PIO under the RTI Act.
All the above facts make it clear and an independent and fair
probe is needed into the activities of the APRC and the IPA in order to
ascertain how Army facilities are being blatantly used without any transparency
at all. It also needs to be inquired whether there is any complicity of the
higher brass of the Army in order to ensure that the dealings of APRC and IPA
remain opaque and they are kept out of the purview of the RTI Act for this
purpose.
Given the fact that senior Army officers are involved in the
dealings with both these organizations, it will augur well for the Service to
order a probe immediately on the role of its own officers in these organizations.