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Sohrabuddin Fake Encounter Case: CBI Abstains From Appealing Against Three IPS Officers ‘Discharged’

Chandigarh: Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Monday informed the Bombay High Court that it had not filed any appeal challenging the discharge of senior IPS officers in the Sohrabuddin Shaikh fake encounter case.

The information provided by the CBI was more of a revert to the application filed by Sohrabuddin Shaikh’s brother challenging the discharge of these officers. Additional Solicitor General Anil Singh and CBI counsel Sandesh Patil were replying to a query raised by the court on whether any appeals had been filed by the CBI challenging their discharge, media reports said.

Photo For Representation.

While the CBI had filed appeals to challenge the discharge of two other persons, they had not done so in the case of former deputy inspector general of Gujarat D G Vanzara, Rajasthan IPS officer Dinesh MN, and Gujarat IPS officer Rajkumar Pandiyan, they reportedly said.

CBI’s submissions came while a single bench of Justice Revati Mohite-Dere was hearing a revision application filed by Sohrabuddin Shaikh’s brother Rubabuddin Shaikh. Meanwhile, the advocate appearing for Rubabuddin informed the court that while they had served notices to Dinesh MN and Pandiyan in the case, they had been unable to trace the address or contact details of D G Vanzara.

After hearing the aforementioned submission the court has purportedly asked the CBI to trace Vanzara’s whereabouts and serve him the notice. “The CBI is a premier probe agency. It should not encounter any impediment in finding the respondent’s (Vanzara’s) whereabouts or getting his address. We often direct the investigating officers to serve notices. In this case, the CBI should do it to avoid further delays in hearing,” reads the statement of Justice Mohite-Dere published in an English daily.

The Special CBI Court had discharged the officials on the ground that the CBI had failed to get prior sanction or special permission to prosecute them. During an earlier hearing, Justice Mohite-Dere had proactively questioned whether lack of sanction alone could be adequate reason to warrant an accused person’s discharge.

Moreover, she had also dismissed the CBI’s argument that it had challenged the discharge of two Rajasthan police sub-inspectors Himanshu Singh and Shyam Singh Charan and senior Gujarat police officer NK Amin. On Monday, on being informed that the CBI’s plea challenging Singh and Charan’s discharge in 2016 was yet to come up for hearing in the High Court, the court decided to tag these matters together and will hear them together on January 29.

Sohrabuddin, who the Gujarat police claimed had “links with the militant outfit Lashkar-e-Toiba,” and his wife Kausar Bi were allegedly abducted by Gujarat ATS from Hyderabad on their way to Sangli in Maharashtra and killed in an alleged fake encounter near Gandhinagar in November 2005. Tulsiram Prajapati, a key witness to the alleged fake encounter, was also killed by police at Chapri village, Banaskantha district of Gujarat, in December 2006, notes Indian Express (IE).

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