CAG’s latest bag of exposes for Karnataka

The nation’s top auditor has an industrious staff at Bengaluru for sure. Last week, CAG's Karnataka office relased their latest audit reports (read:scams), and it took a large carry bag to fit all their volumes. The picture says all.

Every year, the state AG (Accountant General) prepares audit reports on state government and some of its agencies. This year’s reports were presented on February 14th in the Karnataka legislative assembly. The same evening, CAG held a press conference to distribute the reports.

There are five reports this time. As usual, the reports are full of CAG’s exposes, all leading to loss of hundreds of crores of rupees. The reports come in a study bag, overall weighing somewhere around 7-8 kgs. A bagfull of exposes, you might call it.

The CAG’s bag, full of exposes. Pic: Subramaniam Vincent.

Except two smaller reports, others come in books with about 200 pages each. The CAG bag had the English and Kannada copies of all these books. Accompanying each book is a booklet with summary of all chapters. These booklets also come in both languages, and also have a soft copy of the entire report attached to them.

There is also a summary of all the reports, in a press brief, which the two AGs – who had prepared the reports – read out in the conference.

The conference started with one of the AGs, Anita Pattanayak, saying that the press had done a good job of covering CAG’s last two reports which had some major exposes. Unlike most government press conferences, this one was well-organised and data distributed properly. Many CAG officers were present, giving details and clarifications to reporters in between. The contact details of all those attended, was collected.

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