Gulf Times

Pawar fumes as Thackeray gives Elgar Parishad case to NIA

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Displaying strains in the Maha Vikas Aghadi, Nationalis­t Congress Party president Sharad Pawar expressed his displeasur­e over Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray’s move to hand over the politicall­y sensitive Elgar Parishad- Koregaon-Bhima case to the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA).

“Law and order is a state subject. It is not proper to encroach upon the rights of the state. Maharashtr­a’s support to the move is also unfair,” Pawar said in a media interactio­n.

This is the first instance wherein Pawar - the architect of the MVA alliance of Shiv Sena-NCPCongres­s - has taken a public stance opposing the chief minister in the fledgling 75-day old government.

The 79-year old leader’s annoyance came after a Pune sessions court transferre­d the case to the NIA and directed all accused to be produced before the special NIA court in Mumbai on February 28 where the matter will be heard henceforth.

NCP leader and state Home Minister Anil Deshmukh had on Wednesday said the chief minister had used his discretion­ary powers to effect the takeover from Pune Police to the NIA though the Centre should have first discussed the matter with the state.

After an initial resistance, the state government came around to the view that it had no objections to the transfer the case to the NIA, as dictated by the Centre last month.

The Centre’s move came barely a couple of days after Pawar had written to the chief minister to set up a special investigat­ion team to re-investigat­e the case including the role of the Pune Police, while several NCP and Congress leaders have termed the entire case as fabricated and the Centre’s move as ‘unconstitu­tional’.

After Pawar’s letter, Maharashtr­a deputy chief minister Ajit Pawar had convened a meeting of the home department and others to review the status of the case, and immediatel­y thereafter, the Centre had decided to hand it over to the NIA on January 25.

Meanwhile, the Bombay High Court yesterday rejected the anticipato­ry bail applicatio­ns of two activists and accused in the case - Gautam Navlakha and Anand Teltumbde.

Rejecting their pre-arrest bail applicatio­ns, justice P D Naik said there was “prima facie evidence to show complicity of both accused in the case”.

However, he allowed them four weeks’ protection from arrest to enable them to file an appeal in the Supreme Court.

After going through the evidence including letters allegedly between the accused, the court said that Teltumbde, Navlakha and other co-accused like Surendra Gadling, Sudhar Bharadwaj and Rona Wilson had direct access to and links with the top leaders of the banned CPI-Maoist, while Teltumbde had received funds from them.

The case dates back to the December 31, 2017, Elgar Parishad in Pune, followed by the caste riots the next day in Koregaon-Bhima, and subsequent­ly the nationwide swoop on over a dozen activists in June-August 2018.

The Pune police had said that “inflammato­ry and provocativ­e statements and speeches” at the Elgar Parishad conference - supported by Maoist groups - were the trigger for the next day’s caste violence in Koregaon-Bhima.

The activists and intellectu­als were charged with harbouring Maoist links, indulging in anti-national activities, planning to create political disturbanc­es, preparing to wage a war against India, conspiring to assassinat­e Prime Minister Narendra Modi and plotting to overthrow the government.

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