Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Two assassins, 4 bullets, a foreign hand, said PIL

GANDHI KILLING: ALTERNATIV­E THEORY

- Ashok Bagriya letters@hindustant­imes.com

Almost 80 years after Mahatma Gandhi was assassinat­ed in Delhi on January 30, a Mumbai-based engineer has claimed the investigat­ion and trial was a cover-up and has requested the Supreme Court to order a fresh probe.

Senior advocate Amrendra Sharan told the court on Monday there was no proof that Gandhi was killed by a person other than Hindu radical Nathuram Godse and there was no need for fresh investigat­ion. But the petitioner, Pankaj Kumudchand­ra Phadnis, is convinced there was another assassin and a foreign power was involved in the murder.

Speaking to HT over phone from Mumbai, Phadnis said he had not seen Sharan’s report but had heard that he told the court there was no proof to back the claim made in the petition.

“But it has to be kept in mind that evidence is of two types — evidence that helps investigat­ion and another is prosecutab­le evidence. So I do not know what the amicus is pointing to.”

An engineer by training, Phadnis, who is also an MBA, is a trustee of the Mumbai wing of

NEW DELHI:

Two assassins & four bullets Other than Godse, the petition claims there is suspicion that a second assassin was involved in Gandhi’s killing

Phadnis says Gandhi suffered not three but four bullet wounds and lower courts ignored that “monumental evidence” in determinin­g the real people behind the murder. The pistol had a seven-bullet chamber. Three shots were fired and four unspent bullets were recovered. There was no way the fourth shot could have come from Godse’s weapon

Abhinav Bharat, a right-wing Hindu organisati­on. Phadnis has distanced himself from the Pune branch of Abhinav Bharat, one of whose founders, Lt Col Prasad Shrikant Purohit, is facing trial in the Malegaon blast case.

He was not the first person to raise questions over the investigat­ion and trial into Independen­t India’s most-talked about murder, Phadnis said.

“In fact, a book, Who Killed Gandhi, written in 1963, raised the issue and the allegation­s that Foreign hand

India’s ambassador to erstwhile USSR was informed in February 1948 that the British had organised Gandhi’s murder, says the PIL. The trial was an eyewash as it was conducted by a court under the control of the British government

The Kapur commission report of 1969 that examined the assassinat­ion had many lacunae and failed to look deep into the real culprits and reasons behind the murder, says the PIL

Also, there was no postmortem examinatio­n of Gandhi’s body.

I have made are echoed in it.”

The book was banned and his petition to lift the ban was pending with the Bombay high court, Phadnis said.

He also dismissed allegation that through his petition, the Rashtriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh, the ideologica­l parent of the BJP, was seeking to clear itself of the accusation of its involvemen­t in Gandhi’s murder.

“There is no basis to the allegation. I have been filing petitions since 2004,” he said.

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