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India: Gujarat police murders covered up as terrorist encounters
By Kranti Kumara
9 May 2007
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The stunning admission of the government of the West Indian
state of Gujarat that the state police summarily executed a Muslim
man in a phony terrorist encounter, and later murdered his wife
so as to cover up their actions, is threatening to expose the
routine use of such criminal practices. These methods, which are
commonly associated with military and fascist dictatorships, are
in widespread use by police and security forces across India.
In March the Gujarat government admitted that Sohrabuddin Sheikh
was not, as the police and state government had previously insisted,
a terrorist killed by police in a street battle. Rather he had
been the victim of a police murder. Then on April 30 the Gujarat
government conceded in Indias Supreme Court that Sohrabuddin
Sheikhs wife, Kauserbi, had been executed on November 28,
2005, just days after her husband and that the police had burned
Kauserbis body in an attempt to hide their crime.
The admission that Kauserbi had also been murdered came in
response to a writ of habeas corpus filed by her brother-in-law
with the aim of forcing the authorities to reveal her whereabouts.
Three senior police officersDG. Vanjara, deputy inspector
general of the Gujarats polices border range unit;
Rajkumar Pandyan, a superintendent of the Gujarat Intelligence
Bureau; and Dinesh Kumar, superintendent of police in Alwar, in
the neighboring state of Rajasthanwere arrested on April
25, 2007, five days before the Gujarat state government tabled
its action-taken report in the Supreme Court.
The exposure of the police killings in Gujarat has added to
a mounting outcry over the repressive actions and lawlessness
of security forces, especially in Jammu and Kashmir and the northeast,
where there are various separatist insurgencies. Earlier this
year, the state government in Jammu and Kashmir was forced to
call a public inquiry into civilian disappearances and phony police-terrorist
encounters after the discovery that several of those whom the
police had passed off as terrorist killers were innocent civilians.
The police murders of Sohrabuddin Sheikh and Kauserbi have
also become a crisis for Gujarats Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP) state government, especially as there is evidence that the
government was complicit in police attempts to cover up the murders,
if not the murders themselves.
It is not incidental nor accidental that Sohrabuddin Sheikh
and Kauserbi were Muslims. Working hand in glove with security
forces, Gujarats Hindu supremacist BJP government has abused
and terrorized the Muslim minority. In 2002, the BJP regime fomented
an anti-Muslim pogrom which resulted in the deaths of more than
2,000 Muslims and left tens of thousands of others homeless and
jobless. (See Indias
ruling party abetted communal carnage in Gujarat)
The police murders of Sohrabuddin Sheikh and
Kauserbi
Sohrabuddin Sheikh and Kauserbi (whose name has also been given
by the Indian press as Kauser Bibi, Kauser Banu, and Kausarbi)
were abducted by a team of Gujarat police, reputedly with help
from the Andhra Pradesh state police, while the couple were traveling
by bus from Andhra Pradeshs state capital, Hyderabad, to
Sangli in the state of Maharashtra on the night of November 22,
2005.
A team of armed men, not dressed in police uniform, intercepted
the bus, using a van to force it to stop on a desolate section
of highway around 1:30 a.m. on November 23. Significantly, neither
the Gujarat nor Andhra Pradesh police had any right to intercept
the bus, since when they stopped it, it was in the in the neighboring
state of Karnataka.
An armed contingent then forced their way onto the bus and
seized the couple and a third person who was seated next to them.
This third person is believed to have been an associate of Sohrabuddin
named Tulsiram Prajapati, who is alleged to have been a police
informer.
The three were subsequently taken to a farmhouse in a village
outside Ahmadabad, Guajarats principal city. Three days
later, on November 26, 2005, the police arranged for a fake
encounter (the word encounter is used in general parlance
in India to mean the police interception of insurgents and terrorists),
murdering Sohrabuddin and then announcing to the media that they
had killed a militant of the Lashkar-e-taiba (LT, Army of
the Righteous).
An Islamacist group active in the anti-Indian insurgency in
Jammu and Kashmir, the LT has been responsible for various communal,
terrorist atrocities. It is presented by the Indian government
and media as the most ruthless terrorist organization active in
India and is frequently publicly named as having been the author
of terrorist actions with little or no proof offered to support
the charges.
In the case of Sohrabuddin, the police claimed that he was
involved in a plot to kill Gujarats chief minister, Narendra
Modi. A senior leader of the BJP, Modi gained national notoriety
for the role he played in inciting the 2002 anti-Muslim pogrom.
Two days later, but without the public fanfare, the police
murdered Kauserbi, apparently because she knew too much about
the foul affair.
In December 2005, Sohrabuddins brother, Rubabuddin, wrote
a letter to the Indian Supreme Court asking for an inquiry into
the killing of his brother. On January 21, 2006, the court directed
Gujarat Director General of Police (DGP) P.C. Pande to start an
enquiry into the circumstances surrounding Sohrabuddins
encounter killing.
For five months Pande took no action. Only in June did he instruct
Ms. Geetha Johri, of the Indian governments criminal investigation
agency, the Central Bureau of Investigations (CBI), to look into
the matter.
Johri and the investigating team she assembled soon came across
evidence that suggested police foul play and filed several interim
reports to that effect. As the investigation proceeded, Johri
decided to interview Tulsiram Prajapat, reputed to be the third
passenger picked up by police when they seized the murdered couple
from the bus on November 23, 2005. On the day in December 2006
that she was to interview Tulsiram, the Gujarat police announced
that he had been killed in yet another encounter.
Johri, meanwhile, came under increasing pressure, including
reportedly from both the recently arrested DIG, Vanjara, and from
Gujarats home Minister Amit Shah, to back off. Subsequently,
she was removed from the investigation and ordered to hand over
all her files for scrutiny.
Amit Shahs brazen interference with the CID investigation
points to the possible involvement of high-level BJP officials
in this affair. Vanjara is said to be a favorite of Chief Minister
Modi.
As head of Guajarats Anti-Terrorist Squad, Vanjara gained
notoriety as an encounter specialist, gunning down
Muslims whom police asserted, like the unfortunate Sohrabuddin
Sheikh, were terrorists.
Vanjara has apparently sought to bully and terrorize anyone
who has questioned his methods. This can be gleaned from the fact
that around 150 advocates (attorneys) of the Ahmadabad Metropolitan
Court wrote to the Bar Association vice-president to go on record
that none of them would defend Vanjara, for he has troubled
advocates in the past.
Tahelka.com, a news web site that gained prominence
thanks to its video-tape exposure of high-level corruption in
the Defence Minstry under Indias previous BJP coalition
government, has claimed that the murder of Sohrabuddin Sheikh
was a contract killing. Tahelka.com alleges that an influential
marble trader in Rajasthan paid Gujarat police Rs. 6,000,000 (around
$140,000) to kill Sohrabuddin, who had been extorting money from
him and other marble traders. The funds are said to have been
passed on to the police, who carried out the killing by a relative
of the marble trader and a senior BJP politician whose name has
not been revealed.
Both Indias police and political establishment are notoriously
corrupt. Only last month a BJP Lok Sabha MP from Gujarat was arrested
for using diplomatic passports to try to smuggle people into Canada
for money.
But even if Sohrabuddin Sheikhs killing was a Mafia-style
hit, from which one or more BJP politicians financially benefited,
the BJP governments attempts to cover up his murder is likely
motivated by more than fear of the exposure of corruption in the
police and government. The police and BJP have been partners in
the victimization of the states Muslim minority.
On May 5, Indias Supreme Court made the observation that
there is a prima facie case for a CBI inquiry into the killings.
The court also ordered the Gujarat government to submit a final
report within two weeks, asked it to explain the reason why IGP
Geeta Johri had been taken off the investigation,
and said it would issue a final ruling on May 15 as to whether
there should be a CBI inquiry.
Within hours of the Supreme Courts ruling, the Gujarat
government reinstated Geeta Johri as head of the investigation
into the murders.
The Gujarat unit of the Congress Party has demanded the CBI
investigate the roles of Narendra Modi and the Home Minister Amit
Shah in the murders of Sohrabuddin Sheikh and Kauserbi. No
encounter can take place without the consent of the chief minister
and Home Minister. We want an independent CBI inquiry into this,
thundered Arjun Modhvadia, opposition leader in the Gujarat Assembly.
With state elections due this fall, the Congress is hoping
to score some political points off this scandal. But both the
Congress in Gujarat and Indias Congress-led United Progressive
Alliance (UPA) government have a long record of conniving with
and capitulating to the BJP regime in Gujarat. While the UPA,
in pursuit of political gain, has been quite ready to invoke presidents
rule in other states, it has not called for a serious investigation
of the 2002 Gujarat pogrom, let alone moved to dismiss the Gujarat
government for its role in this monstrous crime.
Phony encounter killings are not a new development
in India. Human rights groups have long charged that police and
security forces in India carry out summary executions. Over the
past three decades, thousands of people across India, but especially
in Kashmir and the Northeast have been murdered under the guise
of such encounters.
The entire Indian political establishment and judiciary have
been complicit in this practice. As for the corporate media, it
has invariably trumpeted police claims of having felled terrorists
and insurgents in the heat of battle and thereby saved Indian
lives.
However in the wake of the exposures of the phony police encounters
in Kashmir and Gujarat, sections of the press are taking a different
line and have begun, even if timidly, to raise questions. The
Hindustan Times has begun a series of articles on the practice
of extra-judicial killings in India and some media voices have
called for a truth commission along the lines of those
set up in Argentina and Chile following the collapse of the dictatorships
that ruled those countries in the 1970s and 1980s.
Clearly sections of the elite are concerned that the corruption
and lawlessness of the police and security forces and the communal
violence of the Hindu right are discrediting the Indian state
along with claims of the elites thatthe appalling poverty
of the countrys toilers notwithstandingIndia is the
worlds most populous democracy.
See Also:
Indias Hindu-chauvinist
BJP attempts to incite communal riots ahead of pivotal state election
[18 April 2007]
India: Five years after 2002
Gujarat pogrom
While the victims languish, the perpetrators go unpunished
[10 April 2007]
Indian security forces murder
Kashmiris in phony encounters
[22 February 2007]
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