Gehlot writes to Raj CM Bhajanlal over pending payments, alleges financial crisis

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Gehlot writes to Raj CM Bhajanlal over pending payments, alleges financial crisis

Synopsis

Ashok Gehlot has fired a pointed letter at Chief Minister Bhajanlal Sharma, alleging that Rajasthan's payment system has collapsed across departments — from RGHS hospital dues and accident insurance claims to GPF settlements and contractor bills. With the State Human Rights Commission already taking suo motu cognizance, the political pressure on the BJP government is mounting fast.

Key Takeaways

Ashok Gehlot wrote an 'Urgent' letter to CM Bhajanlal Sharma on 2 July alleging a statewide payment crisis in Rajasthan .
Payments under the Rajasthan Government Health Scheme (RGHS) to private hospitals and medicine vendors have been pending for months, worth crores of rupees .
Families entitled to ₹5 lakh under the Chiranjeevi/Ayushman Accident Insurance Scheme have not received dues despite approval, in hundreds of cases .
Retired employees are awaiting GPF , gratuity, group insurance, and leave encashment settlements; social security pensions delayed across several districts.
The State Human Rights Commission has taken suo motu cognizance of the payment delays, treating them as a human rights issue.
Small contractors have issued public advertisements over unpaid treasury-cleared bills for roads and drinking water projects.

Former Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Thursday, 2 July wrote an 'Urgent'-marked letter to Chief Minister Bhajanlal Sharma, alleging a sweeping breakdown of the state's payment system that has left employees, pensioners, patients, contractors, and accident victims waiting indefinitely for dues owed to them. Gehlot described the situation as an unprecedented financial and administrative crisis gripping Rajasthan.

Scope of the Alleged Payment Crisis

Gehlot stated in his letter that the disruption is not limited to any single department — it cuts across virtually every section of society. He alleged that payments worth crores of rupees under the Rajasthan Government Health Scheme (RGHS) to private hospitals, diagnostic centres, and medicine vendors have been pending for months. The situation, he claimed, had grown so severe that the State Human Rights Commission took suo motu cognizance of the matter, treating it as a human rights concern.

Several hospitals have reportedly threatened to either reduce services under the scheme or withdraw from their Memorandums of Understanding (MoUs) with the state government. Employees and pensioners, he said, are being compelled to pay out of pocket for medical treatment despite the promise of cashless healthcare, with reimbursements delayed indefinitely.

Accident Insurance Scheme Dues Unpaid in Hundreds of Cases

Gehlot also flagged delays under the Chief Minister Chiranjeevi/Ayushman Accident Insurance Scheme, which entitles eligible families to ₹5 lakh in the event of accidental death. He alleged that in hundreds of cases, payments have not been released to beneficiaries despite formal approval, causing acute distress to grieving families awaiting compensation.

Retired Employees and Social Security Pensioners Affected

The letter drew attention to delayed post-retirement settlements for government employees, including GPF, group insurance, gratuity, and leave encashment — dues that Gehlot described as earned entitlements being withheld for months after retirement. He further alleged that social security pension disbursements have been delayed across several districts, affecting elderly citizens, widows, and differently-abled beneficiaries.

Infrastructure Contractors Forced to Go Public

Gehlot noted that treasury-cleared bills for infrastructure work — covering roads, drinking water supply, and other public works — remain unpaid. Small contractors, he said, have resorted to issuing public advertisements to draw attention to their pending dues, with the delay severely impacting livelihoods and employment on the ground.

Gehlot's Demand and What Comes Next

Calling the payment crisis 'not merely administrative negligence but a question of dignity and livelihood for lakhs of families,' Gehlot urged Chief Minister Bhajanlal Sharma to take prompt, decisive action to restore the payment system across all departments and schemes. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government in Rajasthan is yet to formally respond to the letter. How the Sharma administration addresses these allegations — and whether an independent audit of pending dues is ordered — will determine the political and administrative fallout in the weeks ahead.

Point of View

The crisis has moved beyond opposition rhetoric. The BJP government's silence on specifics — how much is pending, in which departments, and over what period — is conspicuous. Rajasthan has historically struggled with fiscal management across administrations, but the breadth of the alleged disruption here, spanning RGHS, accident insurance, GPF, social security pensions, and infrastructure contracts simultaneously, suggests either a systemic treasury bottleneck or a deliberate prioritisation that the government has yet to explain publicly.
NationPress
2 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What has Ashok Gehlot alleged in his letter to CM Bhajanlal Sharma?
Gehlot has alleged a sweeping breakdown of Rajasthan's payment system, claiming that employees, pensioners, hospitals, accident victims, and contractors are all waiting indefinitely for dues owed to them. He described it as unprecedented financial mismanagement in the state's history.
What is the Rajasthan Government Health Scheme (RGHS) payment issue?
Under RGHS, private hospitals, diagnostic centres, and medicine vendors are owed crores of rupees in pending payments that have reportedly not been released for months. Several hospitals have threatened to reduce services or exit their MoUs with the state government over the delays.
How does the Chiranjeevi/Ayushman Accident Insurance Scheme feature in this controversy?
The scheme entitles eligible families to ₹5 lakh in case of accidental death. Gehlot alleged that in hundreds of cases, payments have not reached beneficiaries despite formal approval, causing severe distress to grieving families.
Why has the State Human Rights Commission intervened?
The State Human Rights Commission took suo motu cognizance of the payment delays, treating them as a human rights concern — a significant escalation that moves the issue beyond a political dispute into constitutional accountability territory.
What action has Gehlot demanded from the Rajasthan government?
Gehlot has urged Chief Minister Bhajanlal Sharma to take immediate and decisive steps to restore the payment system and ensure timely disbursement of dues across all departments and schemes, including health, pensions, accident insurance, and infrastructure contracts.
Nation Press
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