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Quality control officials failed at every level during Medigadda barrage construction: TVC
Quality control officials failed at every level during Medigadda barrage construction: TVC

Time of India

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Time of India

Quality control officials failed at every level during Medigadda barrage construction: TVC

Hyderabad: The Telangana Vigilance Commission (TVC) report has squarely blamed the quality control department for systemic failures, resulting in the collapse of piers of the Medigadda barrage. As per the report, quality control engineers ignored key recommendations from Telangana State Engineering Research Laboratories (TSERL), failed to monitor gate operations, did not verify whether critical overburden removal was carried out, and neglected their core responsibility of ensuring construction standards. Moreover, despite clear signs of damage – including dislocated concrete blocks on the downstream apron – officials from chief engineer down to site-level staff failed to inspect the site, assess the cause, or act on technical warnings. Tests Ignored, Bills Cleared, Site Neglected According to the report, payment to the contractor was cleared without conducting compressive strength tests for 17.6% of the concrete, resulting in Rs 241 crore being released without required quality checks. This failure was part of Rs 1,342 crore billed for barrage concrete work alone. Registers were backdated and potentially fabricated. Quality control certificates were issued with one sample per 400 cubic metres for all grades of concrete, contrary to the agreement, it said. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Promoções imperdíveis de voos baratos Voos | Anúncios de Pesquisa Saiba Mais Undo Field engineers and quality control personnel showed consistent negligence. Only one inspection report each was issued by the chief engineer and superintending engineer of the quality control & inspection circle, Warangal, over the course of the entire project. This was despite the prestige and complexity of the construction, the report said. Multiple Officers Held Responsible, Criminal Action Recommended The report identified individual lapses of several senior officials. B Venkateshwarlu, former chief engineer, quality control, failed to monitor his staff, oversee key construction activities, or intervene in deviations such as improper secant pile execution and faulty sheet pile driving, it said. Ch Gangadhar, former superintending engineer, disclaimed awareness of the project's inauguration and did not raise objections over incomplete works before impounding, the report pointed out. V Ajaya Kumar and PA Venkata Krishna, both former chief engineers, limited their roles to test certifications and ignored signs of structural distress, including downstream apron damage. They also failed to ensure implementation of TSERL recommendations. TVC recommended criminal prosecution for both. Other officers, including superintending engineer K Devendar Reddy and executive engineer M Raghuram, also failed to verify gate operations, alert higher-ups, or act on technical red flags, the TVC report said. Several junior officers, including deputy executive engineer B Kiran Kumar, certified bills without required tests and issued quality certificates without checking records, it said.

Medigadda cracks: Vigilance panel indicts L&T, 30 irrigation officials; recommends action
Medigadda cracks: Vigilance panel indicts L&T, 30 irrigation officials; recommends action

Time of India

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Time of India

Medigadda cracks: Vigilance panel indicts L&T, 30 irrigation officials; recommends action

1 2 Hyderabad: The Telangana Vigilance Commission (TVC) has recommended criminal and departmental action against construction giant L&T Precision Engineering and Systems (PES) and over 30 top irrigation officials—both serving and retired—for their alleged roles in the structural collapse of block 7 of the Medigadda barrage, which is part of the Kaleshwaram Lift Irrigation Scheme (KLIS). The charges include corruption, criminal conspiracy, and gross dereliction of duty, with officials accused of blindly approving flawed designs and allowing substandard execution, resulting in massive public money loss. In a scathing report, the TVC called for stringent action under various legal provisions, including the Prevention of Corruption Act of 1988, Dam Safety Act of 2021, and the Prevention of Damage to Public Property Act of 1984. Criminal charges under IPC sections 120B (criminal conspiracy), 336 (endangering life), 409 (criminal breach of trust), 418 (cheating), 423 (dishonest execution of documents), and 426 (mischief) have also been recommended. The commission held L&T PES squarely responsible for engineering failures that led to the collapse of the piers. It pointed out that the contractor falsely claimed completion of barrage works despite not fulfilling key requirements outlined in the supplemental agreement. "The agency reportedly deviated from its approved method for constructing secant piles, triggering a 'piping action' under the raft foundation—leading to cavities and the eventual sinking of block 7," the TVC said in its report. The commission also recommended recovery of the full cost of replacing the collapsed block from the contractor. Once touted as former chief minister K Chandrasekhar Rao's flagship irrigation initiative and a symbol of Telangana's engineering ambition, the KLIS allegedly became a fodder for political parties in the run-up to 2023 assembly elections. Executed at a cost of over ₹1.2 lakh crore, the project has faced mounting criticism for inflated costs, rushed clearances, and structural failures. Chief minister A Revanth Reddy rode to power on a wave of public anger, promising a thorough probe into the Kaleshwaram project, which he branded as the "biggest irrigation scam in independent India. " Top officials under fire Seventeen senior irrigation officials were directly blamed for the collapse. Among them are C Muralidhar, former engineer-in-chief (ENC), who served for nearly eight years; Bhupathi Raju Nagendra Rao, ENC (operations and maintenance); T Srinivas, chief engineer, Central Designs Organisation (CDO); V Phanibhushan Sharma, director of works and accounts; Mohammed Ajmal Khan, deputy CE, ENC office; N Venkateshwarlu, retired ENC, Kaleshwaram project; Kotte Sudhakar Reddy, CE, Ramagundam circle (in-charge); engineers from Mahadevpur division, including B Venkata Ramana Reddy, Sardar Omkar Singh, and Ch Thirupathi Rao; B Venkateshwarlu, retired CE, quality control division; quality control engineers V Ajaya Kumar, PA Venkata Krishna, and M Raghu Ram; A Narender Reddy, retired ENC; and H Basavaraj of CDO. Seven retired senior officers—Muralidhar, N Venkateshwarlu, G Hari Hara Chary, B Venkateshwarlu, Ch Gangadhar, Ajaya Kumar, and Narender Reddy—will face inquiry under the Commissions of Inquiry Act. In addition to the core group, 33 other engineers will face departmental penalties for various lapses in design, execution, and supervision. The report also targets principal secretaries and their subordinate staff in the irrigation department who served between 2015 and the time of the collapse in Oct 2023 and recommended action against them. It found that senior bureaucrats "blindly approved" critical project proposals without examining their technical merits, despite repeated red flags. The TVC has advised that disciplinary actions proceed simultaneously, even if police investigations or court proceedings are still underway. The commission's recommendations come even as the Justice (Retd) PC Ghose one-man Commission of Inquiry continues its probe into the irregularities. Unedited GFX TVC's other recommendations and lapses by L&T As per the agreement it was supposed to follow agreement conditions during the course of execution of works. To cross check the estimate provisions with respect to the agreement conditions such as dewatering clause. The chief engineer of Medigadda barrage violated the provisions of various GOs, which was issued for approving deviations up to 15% over the above the original administrative approvals under intimation to the govt. But the CE failed to intimate the govt.

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