The recent chargesheet filed against former Deputy Secretary Soumya Chaurasia by Chhattisgarh’s Economic Offences Wing and Anti-Corruption Bureau (EOW/ACB) on October 14 has reignited discussions around the Congress party’s long-standing entanglement with financial scam. With allegations of amassing assets 19 times greater than her known income, Chaurasia’s case is being dubbed the largest disproportionate assets case against a government official in Chhattisgarh’s history. More significantly, it shines a spotlight on a recurring theme in Indian politics — the Congress party’s troubled relationship with corruption, stretching over decades.
Chaurasia, once a close aide and deputy secretary to former Congress Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel, is at the center of a storm that involves ₹46.96 crore worth of illegal assets accumulated over 17 years of government service. Her legitimate income over the same period was only ₹2.52 crore. This translates to an excess of around 1,872%, as revealed in the exhaustive 8,000-page chargesheet.
The scale and method of asset accumulation suggest a sophisticated and deeply rooted network. Investigations reveal that Chaurasia purchased at least 45 properties across Raipur, Durg, and Korba districts — often using benami transactions involving her family members, including her mother, husband, cousin, and even her sister’s father-in-law. A majority of these acquisitions or scam took place between 2019 and 2022, coinciding with her influential tenure in the Chief Minister’s Office.
This is not Chaurasia’s first brush with the law. In 2022, the Enforcement Directorate arrested her in a separate money laundering case linked to a ₹540-crore coal levy scam. Though she was released on bail by the Supreme Court in May 2025, the mounting allegations paint a damning picture of systemic misuse of power under the previous Congress-led government.
Following the BJP’s return to power in Chhattisgarh, the EOW-ACB moved swiftly, registering three separate cases against Chaurasia: the coal levy scam, misuse of District Mineral Foundation (DMF) funds, and now, the disproportionate assets case. The agency’s report emphasizes that of the nearly ₹49.69 crore amassed, the overwhelming majority was funneled through illegal means — particularly into real estate investments under false ownership.
What makes this case particularly notable is the backdrop of a broader history of scam under Congress regimes. From the infamous Bofors scandal of the 1980s to the 2G spectrum and Commonwealth Games scams of the UPA era, the party has long been accused of allowing or even facilitating graft at high levels of government. The Chaurasia case fits into this narrative — a continuation of the patterns of unchecked power, opacity in governance, and misuse of public funds.
Soumya Chaurasia’s rise also reflects the dangerous cocktail of bureaucratic clout and political backing. Beginning her career as an accounts officer in 2005, she climbed the administrative ladder steadily, becoming a deputy collector and eventually assuming the politically sensitive role of deputy secretary in the CMO. Investigators now believe that it was this proximity to the top political leadership that enabled her to orchestrate her financial empire with impunity.
The implications go beyond just one bureaucrat. Her case symbolizes the wider rot that can take root when institutions meant to ensure accountability are weakened by political interference. It also raises uncomfortable questions about the Congress government’s oversight mechanisms — or lack thereof — during its tenure.
While Chaurasia now faces a battery of legal battles, the Congress party finds itself on the defensive, once again battling the perception of being lenient or even complicit in enabling financial wrongdoing. The BJP, on the other hand, is likely to use this as a political weapon in upcoming elections, casting itself as a crusader against corruption.
Ultimately, the Chaurasia scandal may be a watershed moment for Chhattisgarh — not just for bringing a powerful bureaucrat to justice, but also for reminding voters and political observers alike that corruption, left unchecked, festers across years and administrations. For the Congress party, it is yet another addition to a long and damaging legacy of financial scandals that continue to haunt its image, even as it tries to reposition itself on the national stage.
As the legal process unfolds, it remains to be seen whether this will mark a turning point in the fight against institutional scam or merely be another chapter in India’s long and complicated political saga.
