The Free Press Journal

Never thought it will become political issue, says original complainan­t in SC/ST case

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Bhaskar Gaikwad, the original complainan­t in the SC/ST case over which a nationwide bandh was organised yesterday, had never thought that his legal fight would attain such a huge political connotatio­n.

The 53-year employee of a government college in Pune said that irrespecti­ve of the central government's move, he was planning to file by April 19 a review petition in the Supreme Court against its March 20 order which is seen as diluting the SC/ST Act.

The central government on Monday filed a review petition in the apex court amidst a violent agitation over the judgement across the country.

Distancing himself from the Union government's review petition, Gaikwad told PTI over phone that ever since the ruling came in which he is a respondent, he was planning to file a review petition within the stipulated time of one month.

He refused to comment on the political connotatio­n that the issue has acquired. The opposition parties are attacking the Narendra Modi government over the apex court judgement. "I am a government servant. So, I cannot say anything on the political aspect. I don't see these developmen­ts politicall­y," Gaikwad said.

According to Gaikwad, the case which reached the Supreme Court originated from his complaint filed in 2007. In his complaint, the store keeper in a Pharmacy college at Karad had alleged that he was asked to forge some documents by the seniors.

"When I refused to do so (forging), the upper caste people of the college wrote negative remarks in my confidenti­al report," Gaikwad claimed.

"In September, 2009, I lodged a complaint with joint director of Technical Education in Maharashtr­a government Subhash Mahajan," he said. According to Gaikwad, he got no help from Mahajan and subsequent­ly he filed a complaint against the joint director himself.

Mahajan then moved the court seeking quashing of an FIR against him, Gaikwad said.

"Though, the state government machinary fully supported Mahajan during the hearing in the High Court, he got no reprieve there," Gaikwad said.

Mahajan then approached the Supreme Court which gave its verdict on March 20, ruling that the government servants should not be arrested without prior sanction and private citizens, too, be arrested only after an inquiry under the law.

"The state government did not support me during the hearing," Gaikwad said. Referring to the March 20 judgement in which he is a respondent, Gaikwad said he has no right to comment on the merits of the court's ruling but he has all the right to file a review petition.

"I am already discussing the issue of filing a review petition with my advocate and I will do it for sure by April 19," he added. "The verdict came in Mahajan's favour because the Maharashtr­a govt machinery supported him," he said.

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