The Anti-Corruption Branch (ACB) of the Delhi Police has registered an FIR against former health ministers Saurabh Bharadwaj and Satyendar Jain of the Aam Aadmi Party, citing serious allegations of large-scale corruption in health projects undertaken by the Delhi government.
This development follows approval from the Ministry of Home Affairs, which came on a detailed complaint which was lodged on August 22, 2024, by former Delhi Assembly Leader of Opposition Vijender Gupta. The complaint highlighted significant irregularities and suspected corruption in multiple health infrastructure projects.
ACB Joint Commissioner of Police Madhur Verma said so far the investigation has uncovered intentional project delays, unjustified cost inflations, and unauthorized design changes, all of which have reportedly caused considerable financial damage to the treasury. A formal request for sanction under Section 17A of the Prevention of Corruption Act was submitted, targeting the former health ministers based on these findings.
The Delhi government had sanctioned 24 hospital infrastructure projects, comprising 11 greenfield and 13 brownfield projects with an allocated budget of Rs 5,590 crore in 2018 and 2019. However, none of these initiatives were completed within the stipulated deadlines, and many experienced massive cost escalations running into several hundred crores.
One major case involved a Rs 1,125 crore ICU hospital initiative aimed at setting up seven pre-engineered hospitals with 6,800 beds, remains half completed after three years and after having spent Rs 800 crore with a deadline of six months.
The ACB flagged significant concerns regarding contracts awarded to firms like SAM India Buildwell Pvt Ltd. Their project remains unfinished well beyond its February 2022 deadline. Likewise, the new block at LNJP Hospital, managed by Swadeshi Civil Infrastructure Pvt Ltd, witnessed its cost surge from Rs 488 crore to Rs 1,135 crore over four years, and the building is yet to be completed despite a January 2023 target.
The polyclinic project also suffered from delays and budget overruns, only 52 of the proposed 94 clinics were built, with overall costs rising from Rs 168 crore to Rs 220 crore. Many of these clinics are reportedly still non-operational.
Another key project, the Health Information Management System (HIMS), announced back in 2016–17, a crucial tool to enhance financial transparencywithin the health sector, remains unimplemented. Notably, a cost-free and efficient solution offered by the National Informatics Centre was allegedly rejected without proper justification.
The ACB confirmed a comprehensive probe is underway to identify the full scope of the alleged corruption and the involvement of public officials and private entities.