The Sunday Guardian

NITISH’S ORDER FREEING IAS OFFICER’S KILLER FACES OPPOSITION FROM BATCHMATES

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Krishnaiah was only 35 at the time of his death on 4 December 1994 and was the district magistrate of Gopalganj in Bihar. He was lynched by a mob on National Highway 22 during the funeral procession of a local gangster, Chhotan Shukla. The procession took place at Khabra village in Muzaffarpu­r where Chhotan was a candidate of the now-defunct Bihar People’s Party (BPP) for the 1995 Assembly elections. Anand Mohan and his wife Lovely Anand were the leaders of the BPP and eyewitness accounts suggested that Mohan had instigated the mob to attack the IAS officer.

The 69-year-old Singh will walk free from prison after an order on 10 April. The Bihar government dropped the “murder of a public servant on duty” as a case in which an accused would not be eligible for premature release. This decision was made under the Bihar Jail Manual. On 17 April, the screening committee of the Prison Department reviewed his remission recommenda­tion and recommende­d his release. Now, the only thing remaining to complete the process is Chief Minister Nitish Kumar’s signature.

The six other co-accused, including Singh’s wife and

former MP Lovely Anand, were acquitted. This was due to lack of evidence.

The news that Singh was going to be released prematurel­y gained ground after the Chief Minister attended the marriage of Anand Mohan’s daughter in February. He responded to Anand Mohan’s supporters’ request during the function and told them that his government was doing everything to release him soon.

Singh was first elected to the Bihar Assembly from Mahisi, Saharsa, in 1990. He was elected on the ticket of the late former Prime Minister Chandra Shekhar. In 1996, he joined the Samata Party, which Nitish Kumar formed. He won from the Rajput-dominated Sheohar Lok Sabha constituen­cy. Later in that same year, Lovely Anand won from Vaishali, another Rajputdomi­nated Lok Sabha seat.

Singh is already out of prison on a 15-day parole. He joined the marriage celebratio­ns of his son, Chetan Anand, an RJD MLA from the Sheohar seat. Two months ago as well, Singh was out on parole to attend his daughter’s wedding.

Patna-based political observers told The Sunday Guardian that one of the primary reasons behind Kumar’s decision to release Singh prematurel­y was the Rajput forward caste vote, a community to which Anand Mohan belongs. “The CM has been under a lot of pressure from the Rajput leaders of RJD and JDU who have been seeking Anand Mohan’s early release. Anand Mohan, his wife Lovely, and their son Chetan are being seen by Nitish as those who will bring in significan­t votes from the forward community in the next year’s general elections,” a Patna-based senior journalist said.

The BJP has refused to criticise this move, as it does not want to appear as a party that is “anti-forwards”. Senior BJP leader and Rajya Sabha member Sushil Kumar Modi, a vocal critic of the Nitish Kumar government, limited his comments on Singh’s premature release. He stated that if the prison manual can be relaxed for the release of some influentia­l people despite being convicted in serious cases, then the same relaxation can be done for those who have been booked for breaking the prohibitio­n law.

Born to a landless Dalit family in Mahboobnag­ar, then undivided Andhra Pradesh, Krishnaiah started his career as a coolie (porter), just like his father. While working as a porter, he continued his studies, graduated in journalism, and then worked as a clerk. He went on to become a lecturer and eventually made it to the IAS.

After he was killed, the then CM of Bihar, Lalu Prasad Yadav, appointed Uma as a lecturer in Patna Women’s College. However, after she told him that she did not want to stay in Patna, Lalu used his contacts with other leaders to transfer her to Hyderabad in the same profile.

 ?? ?? Uma Krishnaiah with Lalu Yadav.
Uma Krishnaiah with Lalu Yadav.

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