Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Supreme Court dismisses CBI petition; Punjab Police to probe sacrilege cases

- letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

SIT will now probe the cases to get to the bottom of everything. It is a matter of joy that the decision of the House (handing over the probe to SIT) has been upheld by the SC and the CBI has lost the case.

CAPT AMARINDER SINGH, Punjab chief minister, in Vidhan Sabha

The Supreme Court on Thursday dismissed the CBI’s plea challengin­g the Punjab and Haryana High Court order by which it had last year refused to interfere with the Punjab government’s decision to take back all sacrilege cases from the central probe agency.

A bench of Justices RF Nariman and S Ravindra Bhat dismissed the CBI’s plea on the ground of delay but left the question of law open. “...Special Leave Petitions are dismissed on the ground of delay. However, the question of law is left open. Pending applicatio­n stands disposed of,”the bench said. During the hearing, additional solicitor general Aman Lekhi, appearing for the CBI, said that there was delay in filing the appeal as the probe agency had to deal with legal issue as it may form a precedent.

Senior advocates P Chidambara­m and Siddharth Luthra appeared for Punjab government in the matter.

The bench was informed that there was nearly one-year delay in filing of the appeal against the high court order by the CBI.

The high court had on January 25 last year said, “The chain of events shows that the same (incidents) are inextricab­ly linked, thus, this court does not feel the necessity to interfere in the decision of state government to withdraw probe from CBI or to set aside consequent notificati­ons.”

The previous SAD-BJP government in Punjab had in October 2015 handed over the probe to the CBI. After, the Amarinder Singh-led Congress government assumed office in 2017, the state government had on September 6, 2018, issued a notificati­on, withdrawin­g the consent given to the CBI to investigat­e the cases.

The government had constitute­d a Special Investigat­ion Team (SIT) of the Punjab Police to investigat­e the Behbal Kalan and Bargari sacrilege and subsequent police firing cases. The cases pertain to the 2015 sacrilege incidents at Bargari and Burj Jawahar Singh Wala villages and police firing at Behbal Kalan and Kotkapura in Faridkot.

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