It is now clear that UPA
totally subverted legality, morality and even national interest just to hurt
Modi politically. Chidambaram has a lot of questions to answer.
The latest revelations in the
Ishrat Jahan case have shocked the nation. It should shame us that we elected a
government that used every illegal, unethical, immoral means for pure political
reasons to tarnish the reputation of the one man it feared: Narendra
Modi.
In the process, it demoralised
honest intelligence agency personnel, lied to the public and the media, and
even went to the extent of torturing (with cigarette burns) an upright
bureaucrat who would not stray from the facts. Look at the revelations about
the Ishrat Jahan case. If true, it could imply that the government was indeed
anti-national.
The Background
Ishrat & 3 men were shot dead near the Kotarpur
waterworks in Ahmedabad on 15 June 2004 by the Gujarat police. Her family held
press conferences saying that she was not a terrorist. Soon, reports began to
surface that it was a “fake encounter”. The activists jumped in. So loud was
the breast-beating that a Special Investigation Team (SIT) monitored by the
Supreme Court was set up to find the truth. The UPA government wanted to make
sure that Modi was shown to be behind the killing of an innocent young Muslim woman.
The SIT gave Modi a clean chit.
But that did not prevent discredited magazine called Tehelka from going
to the extent of quoting and non-existent pages of the SIT report. In fact,
according to this discourse, Ishrat Jahan was not the only “victim”. There was
also Sohrabuddin Sheikh, a marble and arms smuggler, who died in another
encounter — and the deaths of equally questionable characters linked to
him.
In 2013, Asif Ibrahim was
appointed as chief of the intelligence bureau (IB). He was the first Muslim to
hold this position, but he refused to pander to the Congress/UPA for this and
did not let them use his appointment as a mark of social justice for his
community. When the Central Bureau of Investigation and National Investigating
Agency charged IPS officer Rajendra Kumar in the Ishrat ‘fake’ encounter case,
Ibrahim told both then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and then Home Minister
Sushil Kumar Shinde that the IB had credible evidence to link the 19-year-old
girl to the Pakistani terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Toiba.
The IB chief also warned the
politicians that the indictment of IPS Rajendra Kumar would be harmful to the
nation’s security apparatus as officers like him do not hesitate to put their
lives in jeopardy to bust terror modules. Several IB sleuths indeed hold that
their colleague Rajendra Kumar’s work — and that of Ashok Prashant and DP Sinha
— in exposing the Muzammil Bhat-Ishrat Jahan terror module was exemplary and
that these cops should have been rewarded, rather than indicted.
They say the CBI was being used
to target Modi and drag him into the Ishrat encounter case. But the UPA was
desperate to hold on to power and indict Modi, its biggest threat, on
something—anything, even if that meant helping Jihadists. Unfortunately for the
UPA, the members of the Lashkar-e-Toiba chose to admit in their mouthpiece
Ghazwa Times that Ishrat was their operative.
If that was not enough, double
agent David Coleman Headley alias Dawood Geelani told his FBI interrogators
that Ishrat was a suicide bomber of the LeT gang under the command of Muzammil
Bhat and LeT women’s wing in-charge Abu Aiman Mazhar. Headley said that he had
got this information from Hafiz Saeed, Zaki-ur-Rahman Lakhvi and Abu Khalifa,
the second-in-command in LeT, during a meeting they had in Muridke near Lahore,
Pakistan.
In fact, Ishrat’s name did not
come up as a passing mention in Headley’s confession; neither was her name an
answer to a leading question by a lawyer. To both the FBI and the Mumbai court
where the 26/11 trial is being held, Headley detailed the entire sequence. He
said a certain Abu Dujata led him to Muzammil Bhat who confided in him that the
LeT had plans to strike different parts of India — in particular Gujarat,
Maharashtra and Jammu & Kashmir. Out of three names of women suicide
bombers of the LeT that Mumbai Police had, which public prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam
shared with Headley, the double agent identified Ishrat Jahan.
So What Happened Then?
Not only did the NIA botch up the
investigation by refusing to believe in Headley’s confession to the FBI in
2010, the agency and the SIT that was probing the Ishrat case tortured the
Ministry of Home Affairs’ Under Secretary for Internal Security, RVS Mani to
get him to remove Ishrat’s link with the LeT from his 2013 report. Mani had
drafted an affidavit dated 6 August 2009 that linked Ishrat along with Javed
Ghulam Sheikh neƩ Praneshkumar Gopinath Pillai (Indian), Amjad Ali Rana
Akbarali Rana alias Salim and Pakistani Zeeshan Johar alias Abdul Ghani (both Pakistani)
to the LeT. It was based on information supplied by the IB.
It was vetted by both the Home
Ministry and the Law Ministry. The IB story began four months before the gang’s
encounter with the Gujarat Police. In February 2004, Jammu & Kashmir Police
had gunned down Ehsan Illahi, a Poonch-based Lashkar operative. Letters
recovered from his hideout led the Ahmedabad Police Crime Branch to zero in on
a blue Tata Indica (MH 02 JA 4786) would enter the state, carrying this gang.
The gang’s objective was to strike the Akshardham Temple and kill political
leaders including Modi, the then Gujarat Chief Minister.
The gang, in fact, did attempt
these operations but had failed in their attempts — first on 20 April and then on 13 May 2004. Strangely, on
30 September 2009, another affidavit in the same case was filed and that said
these people were not associated with the LeT. Mani says neither he nor his two
immediate seniors including the then Home Secretary had drafted the second
affidavit. However, they were “ordered” to sign on this changed affidavit that
offered no argument about why the first affidavit was not based on facts. The
second affidavit just said that the intelligence inputs from IB and RAW that
helped in drafting the 6 Augustaffidavit were merely indicative and not of
“evidential” value.
P Chidambaram enters
Mani disagreed with this changed
government stand. However, as the code of
conduct (Rule
3 of the Central Civil Services, 1964) dictates, he and his seniors had no
choice but to sign the second affidavit. It is obvious that, if even the
highest ranking IAS officer in the Home Ministry, the Home Secretary, did not
remove Ishrat and gang’s association with the LeT from the affidavit, there is
only one person above him who could do that: the then Home Minister P
Chidambaram. In fact, the then Home Secretary GK Pillai has clearly said that
Chidambaram bypassed him to strike off Ishrat’s link to the LeT from the
affidavit. Curiously, Chidambaram does not deny the charge; his only objection
is to the fact that Pillai is now dissociating himself from the decision.
The Sordid Plot
The August 2009 affidavit was not
the only government statement that the September 2009 affidavit contradicted.
Earlier, a 2004 affidavit by the previous UPA government had indicted Pranesh
Pillai-turned-Javed Sheikh, saying he was in regular touch with LeT operatives,
particularly Muzammil Bhat. The Congress-NCP coalition was in power in
Maharashtra, and their police said Pranesh/Javed had met with Ishrat and her
mother in Mumbra on 1 May 2004, as he was looking for a salesgirl for his
perfume business. He did not have such a business. The questions that arose
were what was a salesgirl doing in a car, with occupants who were
terrorists?
Why would someone supposed to
sell perfumes check into the Tulsi Guest House in Bardoli on National Highway 6
on the outskirts of Surat at 2 am on 12 June
2004 along with the terrorists? Further, if the CBI was convinced that police
officers JG Parmar, Bharat Patel, Girish Singhal, Tarun Barot and Anaju
Chaudhary had kidnapped Javed, Ishrat and their two accomplices to stage an
encounter, why couldn’t it file a charge sheet against these cops within 90 days?
The next year (2005) when Delhi
Police apprehended Muhammad Abdul Razzaq, another terrorist, who told the cops
that he had sent Javed to a terror training camp in Pakistan, why did the CBI
not contact Razzaq for further details? Why did the CBI spare Faizabad
residents Muhammad Mehrajuddin and Muhammad Wasi? Mehrajuddin had introduced
Javed to Wasi in February 2004, and Wasi deposed before an Ahmedabad magistrate
that Javed bought pistols and a sten-gun in Uttar Pradesh after the
introduction. The SIT was not ready to accept even the report of the special
forensic board that was formed by the Gujarat High Court on its
insistence.
The board comprised experts from
the Central Forensic Science Laboratory (CFSL) and All India Institute of
Medical Sciences (AIIMS). The then head of the SIT, the ADGP of CISF R.R.
Verma, ADGP of Gujarat police Mohan Jha and IG of Gujarat Police Satish Verma said
the report by medical stalwarts like Head of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology
of AIIMS Dr TD Dogra, chairman of CFSL Dr Rajinder Singh et al. lacked
scientific application. Since when have policemen started understanding science
better than experts?
The Curious Case Of Satish
Verma
Of the three SIT heads of the
time, Satish Verma comes across as the most dubious. Just a month before the
BJP-led NDA formed the government at the Centre, he accepted a posting that he
had been resisting for years. Since 2012, the Gujarat government had sought to
transfer him from the post of Joint Commissioner of Police (Traffic),
Ahmedabad, to that of Principal of the Police Training College, Junagadh. He
resisted it till April 2014 on two grounds: that he was being moved for his
stand in the Ishrat case and then that he had suffered a hip injury. But what
role do the traffic police have in an encounter of the type that killed
Ishrat?
Doctors of the civil hospital who
examined Verma did not find his injury’ serious and declared him fit enough to
join office. There are other charges that are far more serious. Satish Verma
faces the charge of faking an encounter to kill Jasu Gagan Shial in 1996-97 in
Porbandar. There are three cases of custodial deaths that took place under the
supervision of Verma when he was the Superintendent of Police in Porbandar.
Other than Jasu, Verma is alleged to have eliminated Aher Ranmal Ram and Aher
Narayan Jesti Bandhiya in cold blood in police custody. Verma is also allegedly
involved in a ring that smuggles explosives.
A departmental inquiry was
instituted to probe why he let off a key accused in the Gosabara RDX landing
case of 1993, which was later used in the Mumbai serial bombings. A division
bench of the Gujarat High Court comprising Chief Justice SJ. Mukhopadhyaya and
Justice J.B. Pardiwala refused to entertain his plea that the state government
was going after him for his disagreement with it in the Ishrat Jahan encounter
case. Former Under Secretary Mani has said that Verma was “not collecting
evidence but engineering evidence”.
On 21 June 2013, when a team led
by Satish Verma including CBI officers met Mani at the SIT office in
Gandhinagar and forced himto to debunk IB reports that said Ishrat was a LeT
operative, and he refused to do so, Verma burnt him with cigarettes to get his
consent to the CBI theory. By June 2013, Modi’s rise to the office of the prime
minister had begun looking inevitable.
At this time, Mani was moved to
the Urban Development Ministry, but he claims the Congress government still
hounded him. Frustrated, he applied for voluntary retirement. On the advice of
some well-wishers, however, he continued in service. But the continuous
harassment took a toll on his aged mother whose degenerative disease
aggravated; she passed away in January 2014.
Are You Surprised?
The reference section of the
Wikipedia article on the 2002 riots in Gujarat has a dozen odd journalists, who
for more than a decade have quoted each other to hold Narendra Modi guilty
either of instigating the riots or of telling the police to go soft on rioters.
They defamed Justice Nanavati for his commission’s report and then they tried
to punch holes in the SIT report that gave Modi a clean chit. The Gujarat 2002
cases and the Ishrat case of 2004 have one similarity. Indira Jaisingh’s
Lawyers Collective is a beneficiary of the Ford Foundation. Vrinda Grover, the
attorney for Ishrat’s mother, is related to Suresh Grover whose Awaaz Network
held protest demonstrations against Modi’s UK visit (awaaz.org) last year.
The owners of awaaz.org, a radical leftist website are
part of PROXSA, an umbrella organisation for 300 extremist leftists who are
members of more than 20 outfits sporting different fanciful names — based in
the US- Alliance for a Secular and Democratic South Asia, Alliance for South
Asians Taking Action, ASHA for Education, Association of South Asian
Progressives, Coalition for a Secular and Democratic India, Campaign to Stop
Funding Hate, Centre for Study and Research in South Asia, Coalition against
Communalism, EKTA, Forum of Inquilabi Leftists, Foundation for Pluralism,
Friends of South Asia, Indian Progressive Study Group of Los Angeles, NRIS for
Secular and Harmonious India, International South Asia Forum, Organising Youth,
South Asian Collective, South Asian Magazine for Action and Reflection, South
Asian Network for Secularism and Democracy, South Asian Progressive Action
Collective, Supporters of Human Rights in India, Voices for Freedom, Youth
Solidarity Summer and the Association for India’s Development. Non-Resident
Indians affiliated to these outfits, work as promoters of the Aam Aadmi Party
in social media.
It’s complicated. It’s also
simple. There is a huge network stretching across the world—with political and
financial connections, to finish off Modi, hook or by crook. Some members of
the UPA government seemed to have added their efforts to this and in the
process caused our nation much harm. We should feel ashamed of them.
(Source - Fwd message via e-mail from Col NK Balakrishnan (Retd)
great india
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