Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Cops from three states tussle over BJP leader Bagga’s arrest

Punjab Police arrest Bagga from Capital but are stopped in Kurukshetr­a by local cops; Delhi Police team arrives, takes BJP leader back

- Neeraj Mohan and Hemani Bhandari letters@hindustnti­mes.com

KURUKSHETR­A/NEW DELHI: In a drama that pitted police against police, involved a highway intercepti­on and an urgent high court hearing, and culminated in protests and a political war of words, a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) youth wing leader was detained by Punjab Police from his home in the national capital on Friday morning, and was brought back by cops from Delhi hours later.

The manner in which the saga unfolded raised key questions about the jurisdicti­onal powers of state forces, the tenets of cooperativ­e federalism, and the link between party politics and policing.

The BJP youth wing’s national secretary Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga was being sought by Punjab Police for a case registered over remarks that purported to threaten Delhi chief minister and Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) leader Arvind Kejriwal. Around 8.30am on Friday, police from Punjab, where the AAP is in power, picked up Bagga from his home in Delhi’s Janakpuri, and headed to Mohali, but was inter

cepted around 1pm in Kurukshetr­a by police in Haryana, where the BJP is in power.

The Punjab Police personnel and Bagga were then taken to a

police station nearby, from where the Delhi Police took custody of the BJP leader, acting on a kidnapping complaint filed by the politician’s father hours earlier.

The rare confrontat­ion between police forces – Punjab Police also said that some of its officials were detained at a Delhi police station, a claim the latter

rejected – also played out at the Punjab & Haryana high court, where Punjab’s advocate general accused Haryana and Delhi

police of illegally detaining the state’s personnel.

“A proper FIR has been registered against Bagga. He has not filed any anticipato­ry bail. We gave him proper notice to join the investigat­ion on five occasions but he disobeyed and did not come,” said Punjab advocate general Anmol Rattan Sidhu, requesting the court to order Bagga to remain where he was, a plea the court denied.

Additional solicitor general (ASG) of India Satya Pal Jain, who appeared on behalf of the Delhi Police, rejected the allegation that Punjab cops had been detained. “We told the court that we have not apprehende­d, arrested or detained any police officer anywhere in Delhi,” said

Jain.In the hours that the Punjab Police team and Bagga reached Kurukshetr­a, about halfway between Delhi and Mohali, the BJP leader’s family filed an abduction complaint after which the Delhi Police (which ultimately reports to the Union government under the BJP) secured a search warrant – this warrant became the basis for the cops from the national capital to take his custody from Haryana.

“We had just had tea and were starting to get ready when two Punjab policemen, who had delivered summons in the past, arrived. While we were talking to them, about 10-15 men entered the house and started to drag Tajinder. He asked them for some time to wear his turban but they denied. They then started taking him forcibly and when I started to take a video, they took me to another room, robbed my phone and punched me on the face,” said Bagga’s father, Preet Pal Singh Bagga.

In his complaint to police, Preet Pal did not mention Punjab Police and described the alleged abductors as unknown individual­s. Delhi Police’s deputy commission­er (west) Ghanshyam Bansal said a search warrant was obtained from the Dwarka court, “based on which assistance of Kurukshetr­a district police was taken to trace and recover the abducted victim”.

The crux of the row between the Punjab and Delhi police appears to be over a protocol that requires police to inform local law enforcemen­t while apprehendi­ng a suspect from another state.

Punjab AG Sidhu told the HC the state personnel followed proper procedure and informed the Janakpuri station. “We sent the team to his house and a team also went to the Janakpuri police station. Deputy superinten­dent of police (DSP) Kuljinder Singh was still sitting there along with his team for giving intimation since morning but the Delhi Police did not record it,” Sidhu said. Jain, on his part, contended that the Punjab Police did not involve the Delhi Police nor gave them any prior informatio­n. “So, the Delhi Police had no informatio­n why he was arrested and by whom”, and added that the “Punjab cops remained at the Delhi station voluntaril­y”.

In Delhi, a lawyer representi­ng Punjab police said the Janakpuri police station did not allow the DSP, an ASI and a constable to leave. “When we told the station officers about what their lawyer submitted to the high court, they still didn’t let us leave. We then started taking their videos after which they let us leave around 5:30pm,” said lawyer RK Rathore. In a video that emerged during the day, the ASI, who was among those who were allegedly forced into police custody, also made a police control room call two hours after they reached Janakpuri police station alleging that the DSP has been detained.

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