Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Gurugram school murder: CBI court pulls up Haryana authoritie­s

- Tanbir Dhaliwal tanbir.dhaliwal@htlive.com

: ‘Sickened’ by the ‘lackadaisi­cal’ attitude of the sanctionin­g authority to prosecute four policemen, the CBI court Panchkula slammed Haryana authoritie­s for ‘sleeping over’ like a ‘Kumbhakarn­a’ over the request of country’s premier investigat­ing agency.

PANCHKULA: ‘Sickened’ by the ‘lackadaisi­cal’ attitude of the sanctionin­g authority to prosecute four policemen, the CBI court Panchkula slammed the principal secretary (home), Haryana, among others, for ‘sleeping over’ like a ‘Kumbhakarn­a’ over the request of the country’s premier investigat­ing agency instead of dischargin­g its statutory duties.

The court has given 10 days’ time to revert. The case for which the CBI is seeking prosecutio­n sanction is related to the murder of 7-year-old boy on September 8, 2017, at a Gurugram school. In the case, the police had arrested a school bus conductor Ashok Kumar, who was taken on three-day police remand. The case was then transferre­d to the CBI, which found a Class 11 student responsibl­e for the murder and Kumar was discharged by the court in February 2018.

The CBI submitted in the charge-sheet that the four policemen in question tortured Kumar, criminally intimidate­d him, fabricated evidence and official records against Kumar and used it in the court. The four accused are deputy superinten­dent of police Birem Singh, who was the then ACP, Sohna, Gurugram; inspector Narinder Singh Khatana and then sub-inspector Shamsher Singh, now retired, and Subhash Chand. The CBI has not been able to get sanction to prosecute the four policemen.

On Tuesday, public prosecutor for the CBI Amit Jindal informed the court that in August and September 2020, the CBI had forwarded the communicat­ion to the sanctionin­g authoritie­s — Haryana principal secretary (home); Haryana director general of police, and Gurugram commission­er of police — for obtaining sanction, but it was still awaited.

The court observed that the best solace for this person (Kumar) will be that the accused should face prosecutio­n and the law should take its course, but “to my utter surprise the sanctionin­g authoritie­s concerned are sitting upon the request for over five months”.

Stating that that the sanctionin­g authoritie­s have adopted a “lackadaisi­cal approach” and are “yet to wake up from its deep slumber”, special judicial magistrate, CBI, Aman Inder Singh, said: “Unfortunat­ely, this court has been pushed against the wall in making a candid observatio­n against the authority tasked with the exercise of sanction to prosecute the accused…At an appropriat­e stage, appropriat­e proceeding­s under the law of the land may be initiated against that authority.”

“It has been rightly said that “be you ever so high, the law is above you”…What makes the situation more pathetic is the fact of sleeping over the request like a ‘Kumbhakarn­a’,” the court observed. The court said the authority has a “dogged determinat­ion” not to grant sanction. “Now, the question is whether this court should express its helplessne­ss or it should rise to the occasion and take some steps to ensure that the law of the land holds the fields and the rule of the law does not get battering?” the court said.

The court directed the CBI to send in eight days a copy of the order to the sanctionin­g authority and intimated the compliance within next 10 days. The case is now listed for February 22.

What makes the situation more pathetic is the fact of sleeping over the request (of CBI) like a ‘Kumbhakarn­a’. MAN INDER SINGH, special judicial magistrate, CBI

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