The Sunday Guardian

REPORt On CRiminal, POlitiCian nExUs ‘lOst’

‘Contents of the Vohra Committee report were explosive as it had named senior politician­s and bureaucrat­s working for Dawood.’

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Officials working in the Ministry of Home Affairs continue to hide the findings and the contents of the report of the N.N. Vohra Committee, which was constitute­d more than 24 years ago to unearth the criminalis­ation of politics and the nexus among criminals, bureaucrat­s and politician­s. The MHA (Internal Security Division), while replying to an RTI query, has stated that the minutes of the meetings related to the N.N. Vohra Committee are not available with it. This has led to speculatio­n that the 100 plus pages report might have been “misplaced”. The MHA has declined to share the file notings of the committee meetings, terming them as “secret”.

This reporter had filed an RTI query with the Ministry of Home Affairs (Internal Security Desk) seeking the details of minutes of the meetings and the file notings, related to the N.N. Vohra Committee report that had become a part of the government record since 1 May 2009.

However, in its reply, the MHA, while refusing to share the details, stated that “minutes of the meetings related to the NN Vohra committee report are not available in the offices of which the undersigne­d is the CPIO. As regards the file notings is concerned, it cannot be provided as required document is a classified/secret document under section 8(1) (h) of the RTI act, 2005.”

What the MHA has termed as “secret”, according to officials familiar with the developmen­t, is nothing but the details as to how politician­s and bureaucrat­s helped criminals, including underworld don Dawood Ibrahim to commit crimes, including the 1993 Mumbai blast.

Senior intelligen­ce agency officials, who had followed Ibrahim, said that the findings of the N.N. Vohra Committee report were “very explosive” as it had found out and named senior politician­s and bureaucrat­s working for Dawood.

The Committee, led by former Home Secretary N.N. Vohra, who is presently the Governor of Jammu and Kashmir, was constitute­d in July 1993 soon after the March 1993 Mumbai serial bomb blasts “to take stock of all available informatio­n about the activities of the crime syndicates/mafia organizati­ons which had devel- oped links with, and were being protected by Government functionar­ies and political personalit­ies.”

The findings of the Committee were submitted to the government in October 1993.

However, it was not until August 1995, when the Central government, facing the heat in the Naina Sahni murder case, agreed to table the report before Parliament. However, the government, under political compulsion, refused to share the major findings of the report and later went to the Supreme Court and took a stay order from making the findings of the report public. A 15-member team from the Gujarat unit of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) will come here on Tuesday with a proposal to contest the upcoming Assembly elections due in the state sometime later this year.

The team will comprise all the seven zonal in-charges of the state, along with other senior leaders from the state. They will be meeting AAP chief Arvind Kejriwal and other members of the Political Affairs Committee (PAC) here, to chalk out strategies and take a final nod and “goahead” for their electoral preparatio­ns in Gujarat.

Kanubhai Kalsariya, a senior leader of AAP’s Gujarat unit and Saurashtra zonal in-charge, told The Sunday Guardian, “We will be coming to Delhi to speak to our leadership in Delhi and also seek a go-ahead from the PAC for preparatio­ns that need to be done in the state to contest an election, as the time for the polls is drawing near. We have a draft proposal and plan in place which we will

 ?? REUTERS ?? Men pull their fishing nets out from a flooded paddy field after heavy rains on the outskirts of Agartala, on Friday.
REUTERS Men pull their fishing nets out from a flooded paddy field after heavy rains on the outskirts of Agartala, on Friday.

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