Succumbing to pressure from various quarters, Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan on Tuesday said he was ready for a CBI investigation into the

"I bow down to public opinion and will write to the High Court and appeal them to order a CBI probe in Vyapam scam," he said.



"VYAPAM SCAM"

The decision to allow the central agency to conduct an investigation comes on the heels of a police constable Ramakant Sharma's suicide in Orchha district Tuesday; the constable, who hung himself, was alleged to have been involved in the scam and had been questioned by the Special Investigation Team (SIT) of Madhya Pradesh Police that is probing the However, no sucide note has been found yet.

Chouhan has been under fire over the growing number of deaths in the At least four people, including a journalist covering the scam, have died under mysterious circumstances in the past week.



"Questions were being raised, particularly outside the state," he said, justifying his change of stance. Until now, Chouhan had resisted a probe by the Central Bureau of Investigation, saying that he could not supersede the High Court decision to set up a Special Task Force to look into the scam.

I have decided that State will make a request to the Hon'ble High court for handing over the investigation of Vyapam cases to the CBI. — ShivrajSingh Chouhan (@ChouhanShivraj) July 7, 2015

He, however, flayed main opposition Congress and said, "They had one point agenda, they were after 'Shivraj' and had nothing to do with the investigation."

Chouhan reiterated that he had full faith in STF (special task force) investigation, which is probing the scam under the supervision of the High Court.

Chouhan said he would appeal to the Supreme Court, too, if necessary. The apex court on Monday agreed to hear a petition seeking removal of Madhya Pradesh Governor Ram Naresh Yadav for his alleged involvement in the scam. Yadav, against whom an FIR had been lodged, had claimed immunity from prosecution by virtue of his Constitutional position as the governor of the state.



The Vyapam scam hit the headlines, once again, after Aaj Tak journalist Akshay Singh died almost immediately after interviewing the parents of a girl who was suspected of involvement in the scam and whose dead body was found on the railway tracks.



A day later, the dean of a Jabalpur medical college who had been collaborating with the investigation was found dead in a Delhi hotel. The body of a female police academy trainee was found floating in a lake Monday, with no suicide note to be found.



Various reports have put the number of people who had some connection to the Vyapam scam but have since died in unexplained circumstances at close to 50, raising questions about how deep the rot went. Under Vyapam, which a conducted professional entrance exams for medicine and engineering, as well as a slew of government jobs, a network of touts, bureaucrats, and politicians are alleged to have fraudently got people admitted to various jobs in return for money. Opposition parties have repeatedly called for a CBI investigation, which Chouhan had untiil now successfully resisted.