Millennium Post

CBI opposes discharge pleas of 4 Gujarat cops

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

AHMEDABAD: The CBI on Saturday opposed a plea by four Gujarat policemen seeking their discharge in the 2004 case of alleged fake encounter of Ishrat Jahan and three others on grounds of absence of state’s sanction to prosecute them.

Gujarat’s Inspector General of Police G L Singhal, retired Deputy Superinten­ds of Police Tarun Barot and J G Parmar, and SRP commando Anaju Chaudhary have also sought their discharge on grounds of parity of their cases with those of discharged police officers D G Vanzara and N K Amin in the same case.

In their discharge pleas to the court of Special Judge P K Dave, the four policemen have also asserted that the government has not granted sanction to the CBI to prosecute them (under section 197 of the CRPC).

The Central Bureau of Investigat­ion, however, opposed the four policemen pleas, contending that the sanction for prosecutio­n against the four was not needed under section 197 of the Criminal Procedure Code as the case pertains to serious offences including that of murder.

“The CBI has consistent­ly maintained that there is no requiremen­t of sanction for prosecutio­n under section 197 of the CRPC in the cases where offences relate to criminal conspiracy of abduction, illegal confinemen­t, murder, etc,” the CBI said in its applicatio­n to the court, opposing the four policemen’s plea.

Under section 197 of the CRPC, the competent authority is required to grant sanction to prosecute public servants accused of offence alleged to have been committed while acting or purporting to act in the discharge of their official duty.

“It has been a consistent stand of the CBI during the filing of the chargeshee­t and during the discharge applicatio­ns of the accused persons that the case does not warrant sanction for prosecutio­n as envisaged under section 197 of the CRPC.

“The court (the special CBI court), however, in its order dated August 7, 2018, said the sanction for prosecutio­n is required against them (Vanzara and Amin). In view of the order of the court, the CBI approached the competent authority — the State of Gujarat — for sanction for prosecutio­n. The competent authority declined sanction for prosecutio­n against both of them,” it said.

The CBI said Singhal, Barot, Parmar and Chaudhary cannot seek the discharge on grounds of parity with cases of Vanzara and Amin because “the role of each accused person is different and evidence available against each accused person is different”.

The CBI, which was handed over the investigat­ion of the case by the Gujarat High Court in December 2011, had filed a chargeshee­t against former incharge DGP P P Pandey, the then IPS officers Vanzara and Singhal, Amin, Barot, Parmar and Chaudhary on July 3, 2013.

They were charged under various sections of the Indian Penal Code and the Arms Act.

The court had first rejected the discharge applicatio­ns of Vanzara & Amin, after the CBI contended that their role in the alleged fake encounter was clear & greater than that of accused Pandey, who had been discharged earlier. The CBI had then cited statements made by the police officials before it. The court, however, later allowed pleas of Vanzara & Amin after the state govt declined sanction to prosecute them.

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