The Asian Age

New turn to Dhanush row with GCF officer’s murder

- RABINDRA NATH CHOUDHURY

The controvers­y surroundin­g use of Chinese tools in Dhanush, India’s first indigenous longrange artillery gun, being manufactur­ed at the Gun Carriage Factory ( GCF) in Madhya Pradesh’s Jabalpur, took a new turn after a GCF officer was found “murdered.”

Junior works manager in GCF, Sharada Charan Khatua’s body was recovered in a jungle barely 300 metres from the factory site on Tuesday. Post- mortem reports suggested that Mr Khatua, who had deep injury mark on his head, might have been attacked with a sharp weapon, Jabalpur district superinten­dent of police Amit Kumar said on Wednesday. Injury marks on some other parts of the body have also been found in the post- mortem, he added.

The deceased was questioned by a CBI team on January 10 in connection with the gun manufactur­ing controvers­y and his cell phone was seized by the sleuths of the central investigat­ing agency, according to Mr Kumar. He went missing on January 17. A missing case was filed by his wife on the same night.

A special investigat­ion team ( SIT) has been constitute­d by the Jabalpur police to probe the murder.

“We will seek details from the CBI, probing the gun manufactur­ing controvers­y, as to who were on their radar of investigat­ion in the matter. We will not interfere in the CBI probe but will do our separate investigat­ion into the murder”, the SP said.

On June, 2017, the CBI lodged an FIR against a Delhi- based company and some unidentifi­ed officers of GCF following inputs that Chinesemad­e tools, marked as “Made in Germany,” were supplied to GCF for manufactur­ing Dhanush, the Indigenous version of Bofors artillery gun.

As per the Government of India policy, Chinese products are banned from being used in Indian defence products. GCF was to make six Dhanush artillery guns for defence forces.

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