Manmohan Singh’s public-private partnership with Rajat Gupta
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http://kbforyou.blogspot.com/2011/03/manmohan-singhs-public-private.html
Manmohan Singh’s public-private partnership with Rajat Gupta
How the PM has been actively supporting Gupta's campaign to influence public policy and expand his
business empire
A special investigation by Kapil Bajaj
How Manmohan used the PMO, Planning Commission, various ministries, and public funds to promote
former Mckinsey boss Gupta’s Indian ventures
How Manmohan turned Gupta’s private network into a powerful body influencing public health policy,
with zero accountability to the public
How Manmohan helped Gupta’s business and health education network to con the states into parting
with hundreds of crore of public funds and parcels of free land
How Manmohan helped create the ‘non-profit’ smokescreen that Gupta used to expand his illegal private
equity business in education
How Manmohan’s support contributed to Gupta’s clout, compromising regulatory oversight of his
dubious dealings
How Manmohan’s support blinded the government to national security implications of Gupta’s fast
growing PE investments, particularly his links with Pakistan
New Delhi, 14 March 2011: Neither coalition dharma nor plain ignorance explain why Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh has been actively promoting Rajat Gupta’s various ventures in India, particularly ex-
Mckinsey boss’s bid to recast India’s healthcare and education.
Why would the Prime Minister of a country be so shockingly indulgent with a man who represents the
heart of corporate America and is a globally-connected private equity investor?
So indulgent that Manmohan’s principal secretary (MoS rank) works under Gupta in an organization that
gives the wily businessman a free run of India’s public health administration.
Manmohan’s PS might soon be working under a man convicted of fraud!
Here’s a blow-by-blow account of how Manmohan used his office to promote Gupta’s ventures at a
huge cost to the public, disregarding the law, rules, regulations, proprieties, and anything else that came
in the way.
PMO at Rajat Gupta’s disposal
Manmohan Singh not only blessed American PE investor Rajat Gupta’s various ventures in India, most
notably Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) and Indian School of Business (ISB), but also put at
Gupta’s disposal the services of the PMO, Planning Commission, and the ministries of health and HRD.

Manmohan had the finance ministry sanction a grant of Rs 65 crore to PHFI’s initial corpus and approved
the appointment of four senior bureaucrats, including his principal secretary TKA Nair, to the governing
board of PHFI, which is chaired by Gupta.
Describing itself as an ‘independent foundation’ and a ‘public-private partnership’ (PPP), PHFI has so far
received over Rs 100 crore in budgetary support from the Centre.
There is no information in the public domain on how this money is being spent. Since the launch of PHFI
in March 2006, neither the private partners nor the government have published any report on the
organisation’s finances.
Even the PPP agreement signed between the two sides for creating PHFI has not been made public.
Despite receiving hundreds of crores of rupees in grants, subsidies and large parcels of prime land from
the central and state governments, PHFI does not submit itself to the RTI Act, 2005, or an audit by the
CAG.
PHFI’s corpus of funds reportedly holds over Rs 400 crore.
Manmohan’s blessings and active support has enabled Gupta’s PHFI to open four ‘Indian institutes of
public health (IIPHs)’, which get a steady stream of government-funded students despite having no
recognition or accreditation from any statutory authority in India for any of its courses.
For an organization whose governing board is dominated by people representing big business,
Manmohan has set a sweeping public policy agenda of “building new world-class institutions of public
health, strengthening existing institutions, both within the government and outside, and conducting
research to enable appropriate policy formulation”.
Manmohan’s support has helped PHFI insinuate itself into India’s public health administration as a
powerful policy-influencing body.
Manmohan has been equally supportive of Hyderabad-based Indian School of Business (ISB), where
Gupta is founder-chairman and managing director emeritus.
Manmohan played the key role in bringing ISB promoters and the Punjab government together for
building a new campus of the B-school at Mohali, where the super-rich promoters of the project have
been given 70 acres of prime land, whose market price is estimated to be Rs 105 crore, on a 99-year
lease for Rs one per acre!
PM admits Gupta’s corporate network into public policy!
Manmohan Singh launched and blessed PHFI at a gala function in Delhi on March 28, 2006.
Rajat Gupta, a Harvard alumnus, had reportedly conceived PHFI over a decade ago along with Barry R.
Bloom and Peter Berman of Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH).
Bloom is the dean of HSPH and Berman now works for the World Bank.
PHFI is seeking to set up 8-10 institutes of public health in India and to introduce public-private
partnership (PPP) in formulation of public health policy, education/training, and service delivery.
On 06 July 2006, three months after the launch of PHFI, the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs
(CCEA), chaired by Manmohan, approved “one time contribution” of Rs 65 crores to the PHFI initial
corpus of Rs 200 crore.
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (or BMGF whose ‘global development programme advisory panel’ is
chaired by Rajat Gupta) would contribute an equal amount, and Rs 80-90 crores were being generated
from some high net worth Indians, a government notification had then said.

Ten of the 28 members of the PHFI governing board, including the chairman, represent
business/corporate entities (Mukesh Ambani, Shiv Nadar, Punendu Chatterjee, Harpal Singh, Uday
Khemka, Rajat Gupta, Raj Mitta, RA Mashelkar, Gautam Kumra and Kiran Malhotra).
Seven members represent non-profit/voluntary organizations, some of which like BMGF have roots in
business/corporate entities (Ashok Alexander, Kathy Cahill, David Lynn, Lincoln Chen, Mirai Chatterjee,
Ravi Narayan and Rohini Nilekani), four academia (AK Shivakumar, Amartya Sen, Anil Seal and James
Curran), two multilateral institutions (Tim Evans and JVR Prasada Rao), and one has come from a central
government-run medical institute (K Srinath Reddy).
The central government is represented by four bureaucrats whose clear mandate is to act as
‘facilitators’ (TKA Nair, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Sujatha Rao and RK Srivastava).
At least 10 members of the PHFI board are either foreigners or NRIs, including chairman Rajat Gupta, a
US citizen since 1984.
Twelve of the 28 members of PHFI board belong primarily to an organization that is not Indian or is
headquartered abroad. While three foreign universities have been represented on PHFI board, no Indian
university has been given a place.
Nor is there representation on PHFI board of National Institute of Health and Family Welfare or All India
Institute of Hygiene and Public Health or any of the public institutions under Indian Council of Medical
Research (ICMR) and Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR).
PHFI lists 36 foreign universities/institutions as its ‘partners.’ Of the Indian institutions, ‘partnership’ has
been conferred on only three.
Can’t you even smell the sleaze, Mr. PM?
Manmohan nominated TKA Nair, his principal secretary (MoS rank), to the PHFI board, so that he could
directly intervene in sorting out the problems that the foundation might face.
So much has been Manmohan’s liking for Gupta that his PS continued to be on PHFI’s board under the
chairmanship of Gupta even after it was reported in April 2010 that the US Securities and Exchange
Commission was examining the possible role of the former Mckinsey boss in causing insider trading of
Goldman Sachs stock.
Nor has Manmohan voiced, since then, the need for Gupta to step down from PHFI board.
Notably, Gupta’s exit from various organizations had begun as far back as 19 March 2010 when he had
to resign his Goldman Sachs directorship after learning that the US government prosecutors suspected
him of complicity in insider trading of Goldman shares allegedly committed by his old friend and Galleon
Group founder Raj Rajaratnam.
The prime ministerial faith in Gupta has remained intact even after the former Mckinsey boss was
formally charged on 01 March 2011.
Since then up to 10 March, Gupta has had to resign from five more organizations, including P&G,
another American company whose stock was traded on the tips allegedly leaked by Gupta, and EMRI, a
PPP that provides ambulances for medical emergencies in several Indian states.
(On 12 March 2011, Gupta felt compelled to take a leave of absence from his own baby –New Silk Route
Partners, the $1.4 billion private equity firm, where he is founding general partner and chairman.)
Companies that dumped Gupta may have been sensitive to their public image; the Prime Minister of
India, however, does not seem to think that Gupta’s alleged involvement in one of the largest insider

trading cases in US history is enough of a reason for him to distance himself from the accused!
Manmohan’s PS continues to work under the ‘able’ guidance of Gupta to recast India’s healthcare
system. Gupta continues to be a member of the Prime Minister’s global advisory council for overseas
Indians.
Manmohan’s steadfast support is the most important reason why Gupta continues to hold on to the
boards of Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) and Indian School of Business (ISB).
Doctor’s orders
Manmohan Singh also approved the appointment of K. Srinath Reddy, the head of his medical team, on
a five-year secondment from AIIMS, as PHFI president.
It’s most unlikely that Reddy’s secondment from an ‘institution of national importance’ to PHFI was ever
duly approved by the AIIMS governing body and was in compliance with AIIMS Act, 1956.
Reddy is Gupta’s right hand man whose AIIMS background is used by the wily businessman to build
credibility and legitimacy for PHFI.
Plan panel, ministries at Gupta’s service
In order to lend Planning Commission’s long-term policy-formulation support to PHFI’s PPP agenda,
Manmohan nominated on the PHFI board Montek Singh Ahluwalia, plan panel’s deputy chair (MoS rank)
who is a well-known PPP evangelist.
The ministry of health and family welfare was told to nominate its Secretary as well as the Director
General Health Services on the PHFI board and provide smooth ‘facilitation’ to the PHFI’s objectives.
(The health ministry has also been generous with money, spending crores of rupees of funds available
under National Rural Health Mission on supporting PHFI’s various programmes.)
Since turning up at the PHFI launch function, HRD minister Kapil Sabil too has been providing his
enthusiastic support to the foundation’s objective of promoting PPPs in education.
‘Health policy? It’s all yours’
Launching PHFI in March 2006, Manmohan gave PHFI virtual carte blanche to recast the entire public
health system in the country. He called on PHFI to develop a “new cadre” of “public health managers”
and “invest in capacity-building in existing public health institutions across the country.”
He encouraged PHFI to influence public health policy at the state level, saying: “We also hope that our
state governments will find it beneficial to partner your initiative to introduce greater levels of expertise
into their public health system.”
Manmohan told PHFI “to develop an Indian agenda both in academics and research,” and wished that
the foundation will become a template for forming PPPs in other social-sector programmes run by the
government.
“The setting up of the PHFI presents a unique opportunity to develop innovative models of public-
private partnership in major social-sector programmes,” he said.
Such prime ministerial faith in an organization chaired by an American private equity investor and
dominated by foreigners and corporate honchos!!
Manmohan’s links with Gupta

Manmohan’s association with and liking for Rajat Gupta goes back several years. “He (Gupta) had an
open door to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s office,” wrote Financial Times on 08 March, 2011.
On 16 August 2005, Manmohan gave Gupta, then a director in McKinsey's Stamford (Connecticut) office,
a wide-ranging, heart-to-heart interview in which he talked about the need to attract about $150 billion
of investments in infrastructure through privatization and PPPs.
On 27 September 2006, six months after he launched PHFI, Manmohan, on a visit to Mohali to lay the
foundation of a government institute, expressed his “delight” at the signing of an MoU between PHFI
and the state government for building the first of the few planned Indian institutes of public health
(IIPHs).
(The project has been in limbo after the Supreme Court set aside acquisition of land at the project site
by the state government.)
Visiting the ISB campus in Hyderabad on 05 December 2006, Manmohan praised Gupta, other
promoters and the state government for building the B-school as “a fine example of public-private
partnership.”
On 23 October 2007, Manmohan delivered the keynote address at Mckinsey’s board meeting, praising
Gupta “for the initiative he took to set up a business school in Hyderabad, a centre of excellence, and
more recently to create the PHFI”.
He also praised Mckinsey “for the initiatives it has taken in India to work with state governments” and
stressed the need to form PPPs for “the successful implementation of our social and human
development initiatives.”
On 01 June 2007, Manmohan received from Gupta and some CII representatives a Mckinsey report on
Bharat Nirman, the centrally-sponsored scheme for rural India, which recommended sweeping changes
in power and irrigation policies.
Manmohan nominated Gupta to his ‘global advisory council on overseas Indians,’ which was notified on
02 January 2009. On 24 November 2009, Gupta was one of the guests invited to President Obama’s first
state dinner to welcome Manmohan Singh in Washington.
Education as a bridgehead, as a market
Gupta-led PHFI sees education and training as its entry into India’s healthcare sector and a strategy to
influence all levels of institutional decision making. In fact, corporate groups like Fortis, whose Harpal
Singh sits on the board of PHFI, have long been lobbying for an unfettered access to medical education
‘market’.
PHFI conducted a study, led by World Bank’s Peter Berman, on human resource needs of India’s
healthcare sector. The study prescribes for the government a framework for formulation of HR policy in
healthcare.
Rather than slog over training of grassroots health workers, Gupta wants PHFI and Indian institutes of
public health (IIPHs) to target the lucrative end of the training market, i.e. conducting ‘public health
management’ courses – in line with the Prime Minister’s advice – to create ‘public health managers’.
“We can’t train six lakh ASHAs (Accredited Social Health Activists who work at the grassroots) required
under NRHM, but we can train people who will train ASHAs,” Gupta had told this writer in 2007.
Gupta’s ‘world class’ schools con the public!

IIPHs’ one-year post-graduate diplomas (public health management; biostatistics and data management;
clinical research, etc.), short-term programmes and workshops run on public funds.
It admits to its flagship post-graduate diploma courses primarily ‘in-service candidates nominated by the
government’ – and charges the government a fee of Rs 2.5 lakhs per candidate. ‘Self-sponsored
candidates’ are also welcome as long as they can pay a fee of Rs two lakhs for the one-year post-
graduate diplomas.
Being a ‘world-class’ institution of Manmohan’s dreams, PHFI does all admissions on the basis of
“recommendation letters,” not tests.
Similarly ‘credible’ methods are employed in hiring people.
PHFI admits that none of its courses has been recognized or accredited by MCI, AICTE or any other
statutory regulator, but are “recognized by the health ministry under NRHM.”
(PHFI may not have been accredited itself but it intends to accredit all other public health institutions in
India. PHFI’s “charter”, given on its website, includes the objective, “Establishing an independent
accreditation body for degrees in public health which are awarded by training institutions across India”.)
Ironically, PHFI itself only admits candidates with “a relevant post-graduate degree from an accredited
institution” in its studentship programme for preparing its ‘future faculty’!
Under this programme, candidates “with substantial work experience” are usually sent to study for a
year at one of the “30 eminent schools of public health in the USA, the UK, Europe, Canada and
Australia,” and, upon completion of the studies, are “expected” to work with PHFI for three years.
Doctoral programmes prescribe five years of compulsorily working with PHFI with one programme
requiring the signing of a “bond”.
Such is the kind of ‘public-private partnership’ that Manmohan Singh and his blue-eyed boy have been
promoting! It involves assuming the airs and graces of a “world-class” institution while using the power
wielders in the government to corner public resources – both financial and human.
It’s not excellence and fair play that is nurturing Rajat Gupta’s public health baby; it’s his connections,
vast public resources, “recommendations letters” and “bonds”.
In case you wonder about the professional value of the courses offered by PHFI’s foreign partners, rest
assured; the health ministry conveniently issued a notification on 07 March 2008 recognizing “all post
graduate medical qualifications” awarded in USA, the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand by
including them in Schedule 3 of the MCI Act, 1956.
With five years of glorious history behind it, PHFI has recently approached the government with a draft
bill to try to get a “central university status,” which will give it an unchallenged right to access public
funds to set up campuses across India and recast the country’s healthcare system to suit its agenda.
Manmohan helps Gupta siphon off public resources
While the July 2006 approval of the Prime Minister-chaired CCEA had been for a “one-time
contribution” of Rs 65 crore to PHFI’s initial corpus, the government allocated additional money to the
foundation – Rs 36.15 crore in annual plan for 2007-08 – without an explanation.
It’s not clear if more money was allocated in subsequent years.
There is no information in the public domain on how Rs 65 crore and subsequent allocation of Rs 36.15
crore have been spent.
For an organization almost entirely supported by public funds, which are being spent on government

employees made to study its unaccredited courses, PHFI has been receiving lavish grants and free land
from state governments for setting up IIPHs under ‘PPP’ – thanks to Manmohan’s open encouragement.
The ‘PPP’ model usually employed by PHFI is to get the state government to provide about 40 acres of
land free of cost and also bear 20-50 per cent of project cost of Rs 140 crore per institute (excluding the
cost of land).
Andhra Pradesh government reportedly provided PHFI with 43 acres of land in Rajendra Nagar area of
Hyderabad free of cost and Rs 30 crore in financial grant for setting up IIPH (Indian institute of public
health).
Gujarat government provided 50 acres in Gandhinagar and Rs 25 crore in grant. Orissa government
provided 40 acres near Bhubaneswar, though it’s not publicly known whether it also made a financial
grant.
Delhi government reportedly spent Rs 13.82 crore on acquiring 51.19 acres of Gram Sabha land in
Kanjhawala village, which is home to an ongoing farmers’ movement against arbitrary land acquisition;
its financial grant, if any, for the IIPH project is not publicly known.
For IIPH-Mohali, which Manmohan Singh personally blessed but is currently stuck after a land dispute,
Punjab government had agreed in September 2006 to share 50 per cent of the project cost of Rs 140
crore and provide 35 acres of land free.
If the project had gone through as planned, the state government’s contribution would have been over
Rs 100 crore, taking into account the market price of Rs one crore per acre of land at the Mohali project
site prevailing then.
Gupta’s ‘philanthropy’ gives Punjab a kick in the belly
With Manmohan’s intermediation, another of Gupta’s educational enterprises planned in Mohali is
progressing at a huge cost to the state and its people.
The debt-ridden Punjab government gave 70 acres of prime land in Mohali, whose market price was Rs
105 crore, at a token rate of Re one an acre on 99 years’ lease to the cash-rich ISB and the wealthy
promoters of its second campus – Sunil Mittal (Bharti Enterprises), Sunil Kant Munjal (Hero group),
Analjit Singh (Max), and Atul Punj (Punj Lloyd).
While the state government reportedly acquired the land at Rs 63 lakh an acre, its market value was Rs
1.50 crore per acre at the time of acquisition.
Around the time Punjab government approved Rs 105 crore largesse to the corporate coterie behind
ISB, it also decided to exact property tax from educational institutions outside municipal limits by
enacting the Punjab (Institutions and other Buildings) Tax Act, 2010.
“Their intention is clear. Hundreds of crores of subsidy for the outsiders will be paid out of the pockets
of the local educational institutions,” J.S. Dhaliwal, president of Punjab Unaided Technical Institutions’
Association (PUTIA), which represents AICTE-approved, private management, engineering and other
institutions, was quoted as saying in an IANS report of 14 August 2010.
“Other (private) institutions in Punjab purchase land at commercial rates. Why is ISB an exception?”
Dhaliwal demanded to know.
The PUTIA members must comply with the state government guidelines that cap the fees they can
charge students at Rs 1.25 lakh per annum. No such rule can even be imagined to be applied to ISB,
which charged Rs 18 lakh and 70 thousand for its one-year post graduate programme in management

(PGP) for 2010-11 (including compulsory items like accommodation and meals).
In the academic year 2010-11, ISB’s Hyderabad campus collected about Rs 100 crore from about 560
students enrolled in PGP; then there were bagfuls of more money to be collected from those enrolled in
short-duration executive education programmes whose annual enrollment runs into several hundreds
and one-year post graduate programme in management for senior executives (PGPMAX), which has a
fee of Rs 25 lakh 20 thousand (payable over a 14-month period in five instalments).
For academic year 2011-12, ISB Hyderabad campus will charge Rs 21 lakh per PGP student.
If 2011-12 fee per student (Rs 21 lakh) were to be collected from 280 PGP students that ISB website says
it plans to enroll at Mohali branch in 2012, it will rake in Rs 58 crore and 80 lakh from the new campus in
the first year.
More fees will be collected from 750 people ISB expects to enroll in executive education programmes at
Mohali campus.
Interestingly, ISB, which Rajat Gupta counts among his “philanthropic” activities in India, controls 260
acres in Hyderabad of which it has utilized no more than 80 acres in its decade-long existence!
In a column titled, ‘Essential principles for successful philanthropy,’ which he wrote for Mint of 06 March
2011, Gupta explains his philanthropic philosophy: “Very often, people ask me how I am able to raise
such significant philanthropic donations for a variety of initiatives (such as ISB, American India
Foundation, PHFI, Urban Development Institute, and so on) when these projects are not single-donor led
and governed with their name on the initiative. I firmly believe in the Gandhian philosophy that says, “If
the cause is just, means will come”.
Since Punjab government also believes in the same Gandhian philosophy, it used the Land Acquisition
Act (which is meant to be used only for a public purpose) to drive farmers out of their land to make way
for Gupta’s ‘humanitarian project’.
Having had the first hand experience of Gupta’s ‘philanthropy,’ “several farmers’ organisations have
begun consulting legal experts to ascertain whether allotting government-acquired land to a privately
managed institution is a violation of the Land Acquisition Act; the farmers insist that the government
could not allot the land to a private body,” writes Vikas Kahol in Mail Today of 17 August 2010.
“ISB is being established at the cost of farmers. Did Punjab chief minister think of investing money in
improving government schools? What will the common man gain from an ISB in Mohali?” Balbir Singh
Rajewal, president, Bharatiya Kisan Union (Rajewal), was quoted as saying.
“The public deserves to know how the land acquired from farmers was later given to a private
organization. ISB is a rich organization. Why did it need charity from the state?” HC Arora, a Chandigarh-
based social activist, who also belongs to Punjab RTI Activists’ Federation, was quoted as saying.
Manmohan creates ‘revolving door’ for Rajat Gupta & Co
With Manmohan’s blessings and approval, the government has used a host of measures to lend
legitimacy and prestige to PHFI, boost its authority in the country’s health administration, and allocate
public funds to serve its interests.
One of these measures is the well known ‘revolving door’ tactic – appointing Gupta, K. Srinath Reddy,
other board members and PHFI-sponsored-or-sympathising people on important government
committees and encouraging key government officials to work for PHFI on secondment.
For example, Rajat Gupta and Ashok Alexander, who sits on PHFI board as the director of Bill and

Melinda Gates Foundation’s (BMGF’s) India AIDS Initiative, were appointed on the ‘international
advisory panel on NRHM’ chaired by the health minister.
PHFI president K Srinath Reddy alone now sits, as a member or chair, on at least seven crucial
committees of the government, seeking to shape policies that will suit the PHFI’s network of private
interests.
Reddy and AK Shivakumar, a member of PHFI board, have been appointed on ‘mission steering group’ as
well as ‘empowered programme committee,’ the highest policy making and steering panels,
respectively, under National Rural Health Mission (NRHM), the scheme that is the primary means of
supporting PHFI with public funds.
From the government side, Tarun Seem, who worked for five years as Director NRHM, joined PHFI.
Reddy and Shivakumar (who is also a visiting professor at Gupta’s ISB) are also present in the Central
Council of Health and Family Welfare as well as the governing body of National Health Systems Resource
Centre, which has been described as a ‘technical support institution’ for NRHM.
In October 2009, the health ministry appointed Reddy as the president of National Board of Examination
(NBE), which conducts post-graduate and post-doctoral medical examinations and awards degrees
(equivalent to university degrees) in existing and upcoming specialties.
The NBE accredits medical institutions for the award of its postgraduate degrees (such as DNB) and
conducts screening tests for foreign medical graduates.
(So Reddy is in a great position to not only help private healthcare providers like Fortis, which is
represented on PHFI board, in getting their hospitals recognized for award of post graduate degrees, but
can also endorse the qualifications of the students returning from PHFI’s 36 foreign partnering
institutions. As long as Manmohan is behind him, a serious conflict of interest in such an appointment is
a trivial matter.)
In June 2009, the health ministry appointed Reddy on the ‘Task force for setting up of the National
Council for Human Resources in Health,’ which has since drafted a bill to set up such a council.
Manmohan approved the October 2010 formation of Planning Commission’s high-level expert group on
universal health coverage, to be chaired by Reddy and with Shivakumar as one of the 15 members.
Earlier, in May 2006, Shivakumar and Analjit Singh of Max group, who is partnering with ISB in setting up
Max India Institute of Healthcare at the upcoming ISB campus in Mohali, were appointed on Planning
Commission’s ‘taskforce on planning for human resources in the health sector’.
To lend an appearance of legitimacy to PHFI’s various projects, public institutions like AIIMS, National
Institute of Health and Family Welfare, All India Institute of Hygiene and Public Health, and Mahatma
Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences-Wardha are being commandeered to support and partner with
PHFI.
AIIMS, for example, was made a partner in ‘centre of excellence for the prevention and control of
cardio-metabolic diseases in South Asia,’ which PHFI launched in April 2010.
Grave conflicts of interest
PHFI’s business lineage makes its formation and activities riddled with fundamental conflicts of interest.
For instance, its governing board has Harpal Singh of the Fortis group, which used to own pharma giant
Ranbaxy and now runs hospitals across India. Fortis also wants to be a big medical and nursing
education provider. It has direct interest in shaping government’s health policy.

PHFI does not think it problematic to be forming relationships in crucial public health matters with
pharmaceutical companies.
In October 2009, PHFI tied up with Pfizer, US-based pharma company, “to work together in the areas of
public health, medical research and education”.
In February 2011, PHFI signed an MoU with Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) “for policy and
advocacy initiatives on key public health issues where India Inc can play a major role”.
Given PHFI’s genetic makeup, it’s naive to ask questions like: (a) How is the presence of corporate
representatives on PHFI board affecting its priorities and decisions? (b) How will industry
representatives on PHFI board, like Mukesh Ambani, view industrial pollution, particularly where they
share the blame?
The answers are well known.
Private deals behind ‘philanthropy’
With Manmohan Singh helping to create an aura of “philanthropy” behind him, Rajat Gupta is seeking to
turn education into a huge profit-yielding business, in violation of the law of land which does not allow
commercial organizations, let alone private equity (PE) firms, to run educational institutions.
Apart from running and expanding his “non-profit”, money-spinning ISB and PHFI with generous cash-
and-kind help from the government, Gupta has been using New Silk Route Partners (NSR), his $1.4
billion (Rs 6,300 crore) private equity firm, to look to control various kinds of educational institutions in
the country.
He is reportedly close to invest $70 million (Rs 315 crore) in Hyderabad-based Sri Chaitanya educational
group, which is one of the largest networks of private schools and colleges in India.
Sri Chaitanya runs about 160 institutions, mostly in Andhra Pradesh.
Gupta and other corporate investors flout the regulations by getting the non-profit managements of the
educational institutions to outsource most of the work to their profit-making companies; the trusts or
societies thus pay fees to the corporate investors for providing various services.
This ‘two-tier arrangement’ invariably results in violations of laws governing public trusts/societies and
the Income Tax Act, which mostly go unpunished due to the connivance of the regulatory authorities.
Gupta has violated the law by founding and investing in Vienova, a Gurgaon-based company that runs a
chain of five schools in western Uttar Pradesh and is aiming to expand its operation to over 50 schools in
the next three years. Vienova also provides online tutoring services.
It does not occur to the innocent Prime Minister, who is providing unstinted support and
encouragement to Gupta, that all PE investments seeking a backdoor entry into education are
essentially illegal and should be discouraged.
Nor does it occur to the unsuspecting ‘Caesar’s wife’ that there is a glaring and grave conflict of interest
between Rajat Gupta’s government-supported-and-subsidized educational enterprises, namely ISB and
PHFI, and his outright illegal PE activities in the education sector.
Gupta’ liaison with a man in trouble
Gupta has been named by a US prosecutor as a “co-conspirator” with Raj Rajaratnam in Galleon hedge
fund insider trading case.
Rajaratnam, who founded and headed hedge fund management firm Galleon Group, is accused of using

his network of contacts, including Gupta and Anil Kumar (another Mckinsey executive), to track down
non-public information which he then used for trading in securities, raking in profits worth $45m.
Many of Rajaratnam’s erstwhile friends and associates, including Kumar, have already confessed to
wrongdoing. Of the 26 people that the US Attorney’s office has charged in connection with Galleon, 19
have pleaded guilty. Gupta is charged with passing confidential information to Rajaratnam on
companies including Goldman Sachs and P&G.
Gupta has had a long association with Rajaratnam. Their business partnership goes back to 2006, when
Gupta joined Rajaratnam and two other partners, including former Goldman Sachs Asia chairman Mark
Schwartz, to form Taj Capital Partners. The PE firm aimed to put $2 billion, primarily into India and other
South Asian investments, half of it through a hedge fund run by Rajaratnam.
Subsequently, Rajaratnam withdrew from the deal when the other principals of the firm, now called
New Silk Route Partners (NSR), decided against being a hedge fund. However, Rajaratnam continues to
have an investment in the fund managed by NSR, according to media reports.
Rajaratnam had also served on the council of trustees of American India Foundation, which Gupta had
founded. Both socialized together and attended parties hosted by AIF along with their wives.
Gupta and Rajaratnam are also said be close to US’ Democratic Party, counting friends among the high
and mighty.
Gupta’s Mckinsey and ISB pal pleads guilty
Gupta has also had a long association with Anil Kumar, who pleaded guilty in January 2010 in Manhattan
federal court to securities fraud and conspiracy in the Galleon case.
Kumar, who worked for Mckinsey under Gupta’s leadership and later joined his former boss in setting
up ISB, confessed to receiving $1.75 million from Rajaratnam in exchange for illegally providing tips on
Mckinsey’s client companies.
Prosecutors told the court how Kumar arranged to have an overseas entity receive payments from
Rajaratnam through a Swiss bank account. The money was then invested in Galleon under the name of a
worker in Kumar’s household.
Kumar made $2.6 million in illicit profits from this arrangement, including the $1.75 million paid by
Rajaratnam.
During Gupta’s time at McKinsey, Kumar headed an operation to outsource high-level McKinsey
research to India.
“They (critics) say Mr Gupta worked with Mr Kumar to corner private and government business and gain
favour in Asia’s third-largest economy. The two operated as a forceful double-act to secure business for
McKinsey, win access in Washington and build a brotherhood of donors around the Hyderabad-based
ISB and a handful of social initiatives,” wrote Financial Times on 08 March 2011.
Kumar had to resign from ISB board in January 2010 after pleading guilty in the Galleon case. Kumar’s
wrongdoing and now Gupta’s alleged involvement in corporate corruption have been described as part
of “ignominious hat-trick” for ISB by BS Raghavan, writing in The Hindu Business Line of 07 March 2011.
The first to deal a blow to the reputation of the elite B-school was M. Ram Mohan Rao, the ISB Dean, no
less, who had to resign in January 2009 from his post after details emerged about his role in the Rs 7,500
crore Satyam fraud as an independent director of the IT company and chairman of its audit committee.
ISB also has the dubious distinction of B. Ramalinga Raju, Satyam Computer chairman and the prime

accused in one of the biggest corporate frauds in India’s history, once serving on its executive board.
Rajat Gupta’s “centre of excellence” – Manmohan Singh’s 23 October 2007 description of ISB – has
consistently been getting linked to corruption and fraud.
And the Prime Minister of India has consistently been promoting Gupta’s bid to set up more such
centres of excellence with huge amounts of public money and resources – be it his personal intervention
in getting ISB-Mohali project off the ground or his open and active support to turn a private association
put together by Gupta into a central policy-making authority in public health.
Gupta’s PE firm to buy big into India
After stepping down from Mckinsey in 2007, Gupta has been spending most of his time striking private
equity deals in India.
He has so far invested in about 15-20 companies, including Coffee Day Resorts, Ascend Telecom
Infrastructure, Reliance Infratel, INX Media, KS Oils, Destimoney, Rolex Rings, Aster, and Ortel
Communications.
Gupta has also invested in a pharma company, Chandigarh-based Nectar Lifesciences – another instance
of direct conflict of interest between his business ventures and his Prime Minister-supported campaign
to control India’s public health policy.
New Silk Route Partners (NSR), Gupta’s $1.4-billion private equity firm, has let it be known that the 01
March charge-sheeting of their boss will have no impact on its operations.
Sure enough, the day US SEC brought charges against Gupta, NSR announced the merger of Ascend
Telecom Infrastructure, an NSR-owned telecom tower operator, and India Telecom Infra Ltd (ITIL). With
about 4,000 towers across India, the merged entity will have a nationwide footprint.
It was reported on 04 March 2011 that NSR is expecting to strike deals worth $150 million (Rs 675 crore)
in the coming weeks, including a $70 million (Rs 315 crore) investment in Sri Chaitanya educational
group and $40 million (Rs 180 crore) in restaurant chain Ohri's, both Hyderabad-based.
Gupta colludes with friends to control bank
In an order dated 12 October 2009, RBI found that Rajat Gupta acted illegally and in collusion with other
foreign investors, including Ramesh Vangal, in buying shares in Tamilnad Mercantile Bank, a Tuticorin-
based bank that has traditionally been controlled and patronized by the Nadar community.
(Gupta and Vangal had jointly founded in the mid-1990s IT firm Scandent Group.)
Gupta and other investors acquired a 24.92 percent stake in the bank by buying shares from the four
companies belonging to C. Sivasankaran of the Sterling group.
Banking regulations require prior RBI approval for any trade in five per cent or more of the equity of a
private bank. If the shares change hands without regulatory clearance, RBI has the power to cancel
voting and dividend rights on the bloc of shares.
A complaint from C Kanagaraj, a shareholder, led to an RBI investigation into the share transfer, which
concluded that Gupta and other investors were “acting in concert”.
“The investors had a clear understanding and co-operation among themselves and had a common
purpose of obtaining substantial acquisition of shares/ representation on the bank’s board and thereby
gain control of TMB,” the RBI found.
In its order dated 14 October 2010, the Bombay High Court issued a directive to the RBI to decide on the

transaction in question by February 2011. The court also directed the bank not to take any major policy
decision until the RBI’s decision.
Insider trading again!
Gupta’s another connection with C Sivasankaran is through KS Oils, the Madhya Pradesh-based edible oil
company, which, according to media reports, was being investigated in December 2010 by the
Intelligence Bureau (IB) for share price rigging and insider trading.
NSR is represented on the board of KS Oils by Vivek Sett. Sivasankaran had purchased a block of shares
of from Citi Venture Capital, another PE investor.
Notably, the income tax department had raided KS Oils offices across Madhya Pradesh in March 2010 on
reports of massive tax evasion.
Gupta Pak link: national security issues
Manmohan Singh’s special relationship with Rajat Gupta also has national security implications
considering that New Silk Route Partners (NSR) has Abdul Hafeez Shaikh, Pakistan’s finance minister, as
a founding General Partner, and substantial investments in the neighbouring country.
So far nothing has been heard as to how the government has been treating NSR’s growing investments
in India, such as those in the telecom sector, from national security angle.
In June 2010, Augere Mauritius, in which Gupta’s NSR is one of the investors, won a licence to operate
broadband wireless access (BWA) services in Madhya Pradesh.
Interestingly, there was no report of the home ministry raising national security concerns despite the
fact that Augere operates in Pakistan, providing ‘Qubee’ broadband internet services in Islamabad,
Rawalpindi, Lahore and Karachi. Augere launched the service in Pakistan in July 2009 and in Bangladesh
in October 2009.
The same ministry had objected to UAE-based Etisalat acquiring a majority stake in Swan Telecom on
the ground, among others, that the former had substantial presence in Pakistan.
NSR’s other investments in Pakistan include Beaconhouse School System, which is controlled by Lahore-
based Kasuri family whose most prominent member is former Pakistan foreign minister Khurshid
Mahmud Kasuri.
Beaconhouse claims to be one of the world’s largest primary and secondary education (K-12) chains,
with schools in Pakistan, the UK, Oman, the UAE, Bangladesh, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines and
Thailand.
Aster Private Ltd, another NSR company, has dealings with Huawei, the Chinese telecom company that
had prompted the home ministry to raise national security concerns in the Etisalat and other cases.
Gupta pulls strings in the financial capital
Being Manmohan’s blue-eyed boy, Gupta also has the confidence to influence India’s most important
financial regulators.
In June 2008, Sberbank, Russia's largest state-run bank, inducted Gupta in its supervisory board, making
him the first ever foreigner to be so appointed. Sberbank also made Gupta its highest-paid director with
a $524,700 paycheck for 2009. (The maximum that other directors got was $112,200.)
Reason: Gupta’s connections in India which Sberbank brought to bear on its plan to enter Indian banking

sector in a big way.
Successfully so. In August 2009, Sberbank received clearance from the RBI for opening a full-service
branch in New Delhi.
Mission accomplished, Gupta quit the Sberbank supervisory board in June 2010 but remains a ‘strategic
adviser’ to the bank.
(End of Matter)
(This investigation is based on information available in public domain. All facts and figures cited in this
article can be cross-checked with the information available in public domain. The writer is a Delhi-based
journalist and takes full responsibility for what he has written.)