India Today

The Ones That Got Away

- By Shougat Dasgupta

The BJP and RSS have disposed of their poor volunteers like sacrificia­l goats while saving their big leaders,” says Ashish Khetan, vice-chairman of the Dialogue and De-velopment Commission of Delhi, an Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) think-tank. He was responding to the news that the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) had cleared Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur and RSS leader Indresh Kumar of involvemen­t in the 2007 Ajmer dargah bombing, which left three people dead and 17 injured. The NIA filed its closure report in a special court in Jaipur on April 3; a hearing has been scheduled on April 17 for the court to respond.

Before he joined the AAP, Khetan was an investigat­ive journalist. Among his scoops was a 42-page document, pur-portedly the first piece of evidence of alleged RSS involvemen­t in a series of bombings, including of the 2007 Samjhauta Express. The document was a confession by Swami Asee-manand, a suspect in the bombing of a mosque in Hyder-abad in 2007, made before a judge in December 2010. Until Aseemanand’s confession, many of the blasts that occurred between 2006 and 2008 were thought to be the work of

A public prosecutor said she was asked to “go soft” against the Malegaon accused

Islamist terrorists. Sadhvi Pragya figured prominentl­y in the document, and was arrested for the 2008 Malegaon bombings, in which eight died and 80 were injured. She had been a prominent leader of the ABVP, the BJP’s student wing, before becoming a monk. Indresh Kumar, who once led the Muslim Rashtriya Manch, an RSS initiative to win Muslim support, was alleged to have provided the money.

Aseemanand had retracted his confession in March 2011, but three years later, in an interview with The Caravan, he said that Mohan Bhagwat, the current RSS sarsanghch­alak, had told him that the bombings were necessary but must not be linked to the Sangh. The RSS has dismissed Aseemanand’s statements as “rubbish” and “concocted”. Last month, Aseemanand was cleared of involvemen­t in the Ajmer bombing. In acquitting him, the court said it was giving “the benefit of the doubt”. Three people were convicted—Sunil Joshi, Devendra Gupta and Bhavesh Patel. The latter two, both committed ‘Hindutvawa­dis’, were given life sentences. Joshi is already dead—he was murdered in December 2007. One of his former aides said Joshi and the newly anointed UP chief minister Yogi Adityanath met a year before the Ajmer attack. The NIA also said it found Adityanath’s number in a notebook that once belonged to Joshi. However, Aseemanand, in his confession, said Adityanath had not offered support to the bombers.

The inability of the NIA to build cases possibly indicates a similar fate for seven other cases of Hindu terror that the UPA handed over to the current government. Rohini Salian, a former public prosecutor, even said that she had been asked to “go soft” against the accused in the 2008 Malegaon blasts. She was removed from the case. The truth must out, she had said at the time. But it remains shrouded in circumstan­tial evidence and conspirato­rial murmurs.

 ?? PANKAJ TIWARI ?? Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur ( seated), who was cleared by the NIA of any role in the 2007 Ajmer blasts
PANKAJ TIWARI Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur ( seated), who was cleared by the NIA of any role in the 2007 Ajmer blasts

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