Hindustan Times (Delhi)

SC SEEKS CENTRE’S REPLY ON PLEA OF ARMY WOMEN OFFICERS SEEKING PROMOTIONS

- Abraham Thomas letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Monday sought the Centre’s response, within two weeks, on a plea by 34 Army women officers who alleged delay in promotions after being granted permanent commission on the directions of the top court in 2020.

“We want all these women to get seniority,” a bench of Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dhananjaya Y Chandrachu­d and justice Hima Kohli said.

The plea was filed by 34 applicants, including COL.(TS). Priyamvada A Mardikar and Col (TS) Asha kale who are permanent commission­ed women officers, alleged discrimina­tion as a special selection board convened two months ago reportedly considered male officers much junior to these women officers for promotion.

“Why are you holding a selection board for male officers and not women,” the court asked senior advocate R Balasubram­anian who appeared for the army.

Balasubram­anian said a special selection board will be convened for women officers against 150 additional posts that were in the final stages of approval from the Union finance ministry. He requested the court not to pass any orders as by the next date of hearing, the grievance of the women applicants will stand resolved.

On the assurance given by the army, the bench posted the matter after two weeks.

K’TAKA BLAST

NIA cracked down on the module in 2020, alleging that “the group wanted to establish an IS province in south India”, in a charge sheet filed in 2021.

A day after the blast, Karnataka director general of police Praveen Sood said that the blast was an “act of terror”. “It’s confirmed now. The blast is not accidental but an act of terror with the intention to cause serious damage. Karnataka State Police is probing deep into it along with central agencies,” Sood tweeted on Sunday. Shariq suffered more than 25% burns in the blast, Kumar said on Monday. “Our priority is to ensure that he survives. We want to question him to get more details regarding his plans and what was the target,” he said.

During Monday’s raids, police also recovered photograph­s from an electronic device where Shariq can be seen posing alongside a pressure cooker with wires poking out of it. According to Kumar, while living in Mysuru, Shariq worked at a mobile repair training institute. He travelled to Kerala and Tamil Nadu where he procured stolen Aadhaar cards, mobile SIM cards and other materials, Kumar said, adding that his mobile phone location data was used to track his movements.

While the target of the blast is still unclear, the ADGP said: “We know that he came to Mangaluru in September. We are certain that it was recce for the attack.”

The police have taken four other people into custody, Kumar said. “One person is from Tamil Nadu, we will question them for more informatio­n,” he said, without giving details of the role the four men played in the blast.

Two other police officers familiar with the investigat­ion identified the man detained from Ooty in Tamil Nadu as Surendran. According to the officials, Shariq stayed in the same dormitory as Surendran when he visited the state and stole his Aadhaar details. He allegedly used these details to procure the mobile SIM card he was using at the time of the blast, said the officials.

A third police officer in Karnataka said that their counterpar­ts in Tamil Nadu have launched a probe to find out if Shariq had any associates in the state which witnessed a similar blast in Coimbatore on October 23, where the accused was planning to carry out a suicide attack. While the Tamil Nadu Police have said that there are no links between the two blasts so far, investigat­ions are on to check whether Shariq’s stay in September in Coimbatore was part of a larger criminal conspiracy. Shariq was previously arrested in December 2020 in connection with objectiona­ble graffiti on the walls of a building in Mangaluru. Another person, Mazz Muneer Ahmed, then 21, was also arrested in the case. The two were later released on bail.

His name had also earlier surfaced when a communal clash broke out over putting up Hindutva ideologue Vinayak Damodar Savarkar’s photo at a public place on August 15 in the district headquarte­rs town of Shivamogga. The vandals had gone on a rampage and stabbed Prem Singh, a worker at a nearby shop.

In this connection, police arrested Mohammed Zabihulla alias Charbi, Syed Yasin and Mazz

Muneer Ahmed while Shariq was absconding.

Yasin and Mazz told police at the time that they were brainwashe­d by Shariq. Mazz also told the police that he, along with Shariq, conducted experiment­al blasts along the banks of the Tungabhadr­a river, said then Shivamogga superinten­dent of police BM Laxmi Prasad.

“The accused had exploded the bomb made by them at a place locally known as Kemmangund­i on the banks of the river in Shivamogga district and the experiment­al blast was successful,” Prasad, now the deputy commission­er of police (administra­tion) in Bengaluru, said.

“The accused profess the ideology of Islamic State. They were of the view that India got Independen­ce merely from the British. But the real independen­ce would be achieved only after establishi­ng a caliphate and enforcing Sharia law,” the officer said. “They were members of the channel that was only for one-way communicat­ion. So far, there is no informatio­n on a direct link with the banned organisati­on,” he added.

Kumar said the police will also look into the conditions on which Shariq was released on bail in the graffiti case. “If there was a failure from the police in arresting for failing bail conditions, we will take action,” he added. Karnataka Police and central agencies are trying to find out the network of which Shariq was a part, state home minister Araga Jnanendra said. “The incident happened when he was on the way to commit a serious crime. The police are on the job to identify all those associated with him,” he said.

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