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          New Delhi, April 25 (IANS) The Bofors ghost returned to haunt   the Congress Wednesday with former Swedish police chief Sten Lindstrom giving a   clean chit to the late Rajiv Gandhi in the payoff scandal but also saying that   he just "watched the massive cover-up" and the guilty, Italian Ottavio   Quattrocchi, got away.
 |  The sensational disclosures by the original whistleblower of the bribery scam of   the late 1980s gave fresh ammunition to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the   Left with both demanding an explanation from the government. The BJP also   decided to pin the government down in parliament. 
 Then prime minister   Rajiv Gandhi and several others were accused of receiving kickbacks from Bofors   AB for winning a bid to supply India 155 mm field howitzers. The Rs.64 crore   (approx $12 million) scandal, bigger than any that India had seen before, led to   the defeat of the Congress in the November 1989 elections.
 
 On Wednesday,   the issue was resurrected.
 
 In an interview to website thehoot.org,   Lindstrom said there was no evidence to show that Gandhi had taken a bribe in   the Rs.1,500 crore ($285 million) gun deal.
 
 "But he watched the massive   cover-up in India and Sweden and did nothing. Many Indian institutions were   tarred, innocent people were punished while the guilty got away," he said.
 
 The evidence against Italian businessman Ottavio Quattrocchi "was   conclusive", he said. "Nobody in Sweden or Switzerland was allowed to   interrogate him."
 
 Lindstrom also said that the case against actor and   then Congress MP Amitabh Bachchan and his family was planted in Swedish   newspaper Dagens Nyheter by Indian investigators.
 
 Bachchan said   Wednesday he was happy to be cleared of the Bofors allegations but was "pained"   this had happened after 25 years.
 
 Speaking to reporters in Mumbai,   Bachchan said that he had "lived with humiliation and loss of reputation" all   these years.
 
 In another damning revelation, Lindstrom said they had   barely met Indian investigators. "Can you imagine a situation where no one from   India met the real investigators of the gun deal," he asked.
 
 The   interview gave the opposition the leverage it was looking for against the   Congress-led United Progressive Alliance regime.
 
 The BJP again alleged   that Quattrocchi was close to the Gandhi family and UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi   and sought the government's apology for letting him go free.
 
 "The entire   government of late Rajiv Gandhi was out to secure Ottavio Quattrocchi. What was   his link with the government and with the Gandhi family that the entire   government was there to bail him out... it is a serious matter," said BJP leader   Ravi Shankar Prasad.
 
 "The role of Quattrocchi should be probed by an   independent agency, and so should be the role of the CBI officials who said   there was no evidence against him," said Prasad.
 
 The Communist Party of   India (CPI) agreed.
 
 "The government and the CBI cannot ignore this   revelation. They have to come forward with a response on how Quattrocchi was   allowed or could go scot-free or could have a safe passage from India," said CPI   leader D. Raja.
 
 The Congress retorted that parties who had misled the   nation on the issue should apologise instead.
 
 Accusing the opposition of   making "wild allegations" against Gandhi, union Law Minister Salman Khurshid   said: "It is a matter of regret that without having any proof, such serious   charges were levelled. The same people are not ready to feel sorry even today.   They should apologise before the public."
 
 He added that it was a closed   case and there was no need to reopen it.
 
 The Bachchans, Bollywood's   first family, said they had been vindicated.
 
 "We knew the truth 25 years   back but justice takes its own time and our stand has been vindicated," said   Rajya Sabha member Jaya Bachchan.
 
 Her husband, megastar Amitabh, who was   an MP at the time said the accusations had led to years of "anguish of petulant   blame".
 
 "No one shall be able to understand or even remotely fathom, the   hours and days and months and years of the anguish of petulant blame, that I had   to go through. But will it really interest another? No it shall not," Amitabh,   who was MP at the time, wrote on his blog bigb.bigadda.com.
 
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