Hindustan Times (Delhi)

13 people ‘ cornered’ 1 man, police tell court

CHIEF SECY ASSAULT Cops say all AAP MLAS worked with a ‘common intent’

- Richa Banka richa.banka@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: The Delhi Police told a city court on Saturday that chief minister Arvind Kejriwal, his deputy Manish Sisodia and other Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) MLAS allegedly assaulted chief secretary Anshu Prakash at the February 19 midnight meeting with the common intention of pressuring him “to act in a certain manner”, leading to a situation where one person was cornered by 13 people.

The submission­s were made in the court of additional chief metropolit­an magistrate Samar Vishal after he asked the police the reason for including sections 34 (common intention), 149 (unlawful assembly) and 109 (punishment of abetment if the act abetted is committed in consequenc­e) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) in the charge sheet that was filed on August 13 against the CM, his deputy and 11 AAP MLAS.

The 13 AAP leaders were charged under 13 different sections of the IPC, including criminal intimidati­on, assaulting a public servant, wrongful confinemen­t and criminal conspiracy, for allegedly assaulting the chief secretary past midnight at a meeting convened at the chief minister’s residence on February 19.

The police said that of the 11 MLAS who were called, two were made to sit on a sofa according to a preconceiv­ed plan after which the CS was assaulted, threatened, abused and confined.

“No one intervened during the incident, which happened due to a common object and intention. Everybody (MLAS) in the room was on one side against a single person on the other side. One man was cornered by 13 people,” the counsel for the Delhi police said.

The police contended that the Delhi government had been trying to bring the door-to-door ration card scheme for one and half months before the incident for which it had held several meetings. However, when the work was not done due to the tiff with the bureaucrat­s, they thought of “pressuring the CS”.

“When the scheme was not notified, they thought that ‘Let the boss of all the bureaucrat­s (CS) be called and pressured to get the work done’.”

On the charge of unlawful assembly, the police said that joining and continuing an illegal gathering was an offence.

The court on Saturday sought to know from the Delhi police that how these MLAS could be charged for common intention

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