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From: Manisha Sethi <[email protected]>
Date: 24 January 2015 at 22:20
Subject: Fwd: Brushing Aside the Conspiracy Angle: on Amit Shah's discharge
http://www.epw.in/commentary/brushing-aside-conspiracy-angle.html
 Brushing Aside the Conspiracy AngleThe order by the Central Bureau of 
Investigation providing a clean chit to former Gujarat Home Minister Amit Shah 
has wiped out the entire slate of the Supreme Court's intervention in various 
encounter death cases. The discharge of the "lynchpin" of the conspiracy 
despite voluminous material providing strong grounds for proceeding with the 
trial will ultimately raise questions about judicial independence.

Manisha Sethi ([email protected]) teaches at the Centre for Comparative 
Religions and Civilizations, Jamia Millia Islamia, Delhi.It is a matter of 
record that the State of Gujarat – after stout denial – admitted that 
Sohrabuddin Sheikh and his wife had been killed in illegal police custody. It 
is also a matter of record that the State of Gujarat ultimately – again after 
much dodging and subterfuge – accepted that the Tulsi Prajapati encounter was 
stage-managed.In both cases, charge sheets were filed, committed to sessions 
with great alacrity, and trial dates fixed. However, the Supreme Court noted 
that this urgency arose from the desire of the Gujarat police to keep the two 
cases separate. Their “trenchant refusal” to draw the dots between the two sets 
of killings was part of the reason why the Supreme Court transferred the 
investigations to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) with the express 
direction to unearth the wider conspiracy, if any. The CBI, in the course of 
its investigations, is said to have found Amit Shah (currently the president of 
the Bharatiya Janata Party) to be the “lynchpin” of the main conspiracy. Shah 
was arraigned as accused number 16.Just as 2014 drew to a close, in view 
supposedly of settled principles of law and evidence on record, the special 
judge for the CBI discharged accused number 16 in the fake encounter and murder 
of Sohrabuddin, Kauser Bi and Tulsi Prajapati. The accused number 16 is widely 
recognised to be the chief lieutenant of the most powerful person in the 
current power hierarchy in the country. The Court also found “merit” in the 
contention that the accused has been “shown to be involved in this case by the 
CBI for some political reasons”.1It is true that Amit Shah was no ordinary 
person to be among the accused. He was the state home minister when the 
encounters took place – Sohrabuddin’s and Kauser Bi’s in December 2005 and 
Tulsi Prajapati’s exactly a year later in 2006.Anyone familiar with criminal 
trials will vouch for the low rate of discharge at the stage of framing of 
charges under Section 227 ofCrPC. Under this section, the judge is expected to 
merely sift the evidence to come to a conclusion whether or not there are 
“sufficient grounds for proceeding against the accused”. Very clearly, at this 
stage, the judicial mind was not exercised by the question of an accused’s 
guilt or innocence, which can only be determined in the course of a trial, but 
simply whether a strong suspicion existed about the accused’s possible 
complicity in the crime alleged. In other words, the CBI court for the present 
was not asked to sit in judgment of Amit Shah’s guilt, but only to decide 
whether there existed strong enough indications to link the BJP president to 
these grisly murders. The court in its wisdom found none. It rejected the 
plethora of witness statements recorded under sections 161 and 164CrPC as mere 
“hearsay”, evidence of systematic and direct interference by Shah in the state 
CID probe into the encounter as “vague and subjective” and material evidence of 
phone call records between Shah and the senior police officers accused of 
murder as insufficient.Phone Call RecordsLet us turn first to the high level of 
telephonic exchange between Shah and police officers including D G Vanzara, S 
Rajkumar Pandian (then superintendent of police, ATS, Ahmedabad), N K Amin, and 
others in the period in which the killings took place. In its charge sheet, the 
CBI found this high telephone traffic between a minister and field level 
officers to be odd:As per the official protocol, a Minister of State for Home, 
Government of Gujarat would be normally expected to talk/discuss with the Home 
Secretary and/or the Chief Secretary, and further, if he were to be so briefed, 
then also, he would be expected to talk/discuss with the Chief of the 
Anti-Terror Squad (ATS) or the Crime Branch.Shah’s lawyer while moving his bail 
application in 2010 had submitted to the Gujarat High Court that the abnormal 
volume of phone calls between Shah and police officers owed to theabduction of 
a young boy which was investigated by Mr Amin and, therefore, as a public 
representative and Home Minister, he was constantly kept in touch to get the 
information about the progress of the matter and as a public representative in 
such situation he is not to see the protocol and, on the contrary, the protocol 
is not required to be followed in such situation as media was also focusing on 
that case.2In the discharge application, however, the abducted boy is 
completely forgotten and a new theory about the minister’s signature “style of 
functioning” – of being in direct and constant “touch with field level police 
officers… particularly when the law and order situation in the State of Gujarat 
after the Godhra riots was too delicate to handle” is brought forth. Forget the 
fact that Soharbuddin and Kauser Bi were killed in December 2005 – three years 
after Godhra. This is a theory that is appreciated by the Court, which adds by 
way of observation:The judicial notice of the fact well can be taken that 
terrorist activities have increased and are rampant all over the world. In such 
a situation, if a Home Minister of a particular State enters in a direct 
dialogue with officers like the Superintendent of Police working at the ground 
level is not a matter of surprise, unusual or unnatural as the CBI proposes.In 
fact, the admission of continuous and close interaction between Shah and police 
officers (whose call detail records prove their location at the site of the 
farmhouse where Sohrabuddin was eliminated) should be cause for serious 
suspicion about Shah’s knowledge and role in the conspiracy, and not evidence 
of his ignorance of such a conspiracy.Furthermore, if the call detail records 
were totally insignificant and proved nothing, why was there such a concerted 
effort to suppress their existence? It was the state CID, which during the 
course of its investigations had taken phone call details between Shah and 
accused police officers on record. However, once the Supreme Court directed the 
transfer of investigation to the CBI, the CID failed to hand over the CD 
containing these phone conversations. A total of 331 conversations had been 
deleted from the record by O P Mathur, recently brought in by minister Shah as 
head of the state CID to replace Rajneesh Rai, who, by arresting the top police 
officers of the state for the murder of Sohrabuddin, had proved to be 
intractable.3Attempt to Sabotage CID EnquiryThe earliest record of Shah’s 
direct interference comes from one of the early reports filed by inspector 
general of police, Geeta Johri, who was made in-charge of the state CID 
investigation. In PartB of the slim 24-page report, Johri recorded how Shah had 
attempted to sabotage the enquiry. She wrote that though she and the 
investigating officer (IO) inspector V L Solanki did not face any “hurdle” 
initially,However, as soon as the statements of witnesses pertaining to 
confinement of Sohrabuddin and Kausarbi in the Farm House of Shri Girish Patel 
at Ahmedabad came to be recorded, it came to the knowledge of Shri Vanzara and 
Shri Rajkumar Pandian [two of the accused officers]. It is further learnt that 
these officers brought the above facts to the notice of Respondent No. 2, Shri 
Amit Shah, Minister of State for Home, Government of Gujarat.It further states 
that Shah “brought to bear pressure” on the enquiry process, resulting in the 
enquiry papers being taken away from her “under the guise of scrutiny”. He 
“directed Shri G C Raigar, Additional Director General of Police, CID (Crime & 
Railways) to provide him with the list of witnesses, both police and private, 
who are yet to be contacted by CID (Crime) for recording their statement in the 
said enquiry. Such direction of Minister of State for Home goes beyond the 
scope of his office, was patently illegal and apparently designed to provide 
the same list to accused police officers ... so as to enable them to take 
measures in their defence.”The report also mentions a meeting of senior police 
officers that Shah had convened at Circuit House, Gandhinagar on 30 January 
2006, where he introduced the theory that Kauser Bi and Sohrabuddin were not 
married, while admitting in a “cavalier manner” that she may have been killed 
as well.4The Key Statements against ShahThe reference to another meeting called 
by Amit Shah surfaces repeatedly through the witness statements. Three crucial 
statements, all recorded under 164CrPC, taken together point unmistakably to 
the role of Shah. The first and the most direct source of incrimination is the 
statement of Gyanchand C Raiger, who was at the time ADGP (Home guards) with 
the additional charge as the ADGP CID (Crimes). He stated that Shah called a 
meeting, which was attended by him, P C Pandey and Geeta Johri. Shah was livid 
at the direction the CID probe was taking under the then IO Solanki, asking how 
a mere inspector could dare to investigate senior police officers. Raiger 
states that he refused to follow the “illegal instructions” being demanded by 
Shah and asked for a transfer.Raiger’s statement receives corroboration from V 
L Solanki’s misstatement. He submitted that Geeta Johri conveyed to him the 
details of this meeting where the minister had made his displeasure and “bad 
mood” at Solanki’s report apparent, and asked him to change the report. 
Rajendra Acharya, Geeta Johri’s typist-cum-secretary, in his statement 
confirmed that Solanki had once emerged from Johri’s chamber after a meeting 
and told him about the pressure on him to change the report following Johri’s 
meeting with the minister.How can this entire set of statements be dismissed as 
mere “hearsay”? Raiger’s statement related to Section 164 of theCrPC is direct, 
while Solanki’s and Acharya’s statements lend weight to that. Shah’s counsel 
insist that even if taken at face value, these statements do not hint at any 
conspiracy on his part.That a minister would go to these lengths to protect his 
men, whom he admittedly was in close contact during the period of both 
encounters (Sohrabuddin and Prajapati) means nothing? How could it be that a 
minister whose style included having his ear to the ground through personal 
contacts with everyone in the field, remained in the dark as his top officers 
abducted and killed three people?Geeta Johri’s Fluctuating StandThe court also 
dismisses the possibility of such a meeting since Geeta Johri had denied that 
such a meeting ever took place. Her flip-flops have been significant signposts 
in the story of this investigation. In fact, it is a matter of record that 
Johri’s initial investigation, before she was removed from her post, proved to 
be path breaking. However, when she was reinstated, she took a completeU-turn 
on the case. The apex praising the investigation of the IO Solanki chastised 
Johri for her work. The Supreme Court observed the following:69. We have 
observed that from the record, it was found that Mr V L Solanki, an 
investigating officer, was proceeding in the right direction, but Ms Johri had 
not been carrying out the investigation in the right manner, in view of our 
discussions made here in above. It appears that Ms Johri had not made any 
reference to the second report of Solanki, and that though his first report was 
attached with one of her reports, the same was not forwarded to this Court....
81. In the present circumstances and in view of the involvement of the police 
officials the State in this crime, we cannot shut our eyes and direct the State 
police authorities to continue with the investigation and the charge-sheet and 
for a proper and fair investigation, we also feel that CBI should be requested 
to take up the investigation and submit a report in this Court within six 
months from the date of handing over a copy of this judgment and the records 
relating to this crime to them.5The Supreme Court’s RoleIn fact, the Supreme 
Court’s detailed orders and observations point to a scrupulous monitoring of 
the investigations by the apex court. By terming Shah’s implication in the 
triple murder fake encounter case as a political conspiracy carried out by CBI 
under directions from a rival political party, the special CBI court has cast 
aspersions on the Supreme Court’s work which was monitoring the investigations 
closely at all stages.It should also be kept in mind that though the Supreme 
Court did not cancel the bail granted to Shah by the Gujarat High Court in 
2010, it held:Had it been an application for grant of bail to Amitbhai Shah, it 
is hard to say what view the Court might have taken but the considerations for 
cancellation of bail granted by the High Court are materially different and in 
this case we feel reluctant to deprive Amitbhai Shah of the privilege granted 
to him by the High Court. The same court was convinced that in order to 
preserve the integrity of the trial it is necessary to shift it outside the 
State.6The Rajasthan ConnectionThe special court while discharging Amit Shah 
has also taken the view that the CBI could not sustain the motive they had 
ascribed to him as “Sohrabuddin was already involved in many cases and was an 
absconding accused, which is not in dispute, and there was a reason for the 
Gujarat and the Rajasthan Police to nab him.” This is a classic justification 
for encounter killings in the annals of our criminal justice system. Is not the 
court already pronouncing verdict on the genuineness of the encounter by saying 
so? The court further wonders how Rajasthan police became involved since Shah 
could not have had any control over them. This immediately reminds us of the 
Gulabchand Kataria case. A BJP leader from Rajasthan, Kataria was named an 
accused in the supplementary charge sheet filed by the CBI in 2013. (The same 
year, when Vasundhra Raje formed the government in the state, Kataria was made 
a minister.) If anything, the intimations of a wide political conspiracy have 
been comprehensively ignored.Questions RemainThe special CBI court also 
disregarded the statements of key witnesses: namely, the Patel brothers, 
Dashrath and Raman, proprietors of the successful Popular Builders. Their 
statements to the CBI detail how money was extorted from them and how they were 
being forced by Vanzara and cohorts to give a statement against Sohrabuddin. 
The statement describes the meeting as well as the telephonic conversation with 
Shah. This has been recorded under 164CrPC, and yet this is not deemed evidence 
but hearsay and unreliable.What is also disconcerting is the short shrift given 
to the sequence of events leading up to the murder of Tulsi Prajapati. 
Prajapati was killed just when the CID team was to leave for Udaipur jail where 
he was lodged in connection with another crime to interrogate him. Prajapati 
had a foreboding about the impending danger and had been writing feverishly all 
through the year to the Udaipur collector, various courts and even the National 
Human Rights Commission seeking protection.7 He was finally eliminated enroute 
from Ahmedabad to Udaipur returning from a court appearance. He was murdered in 
the border district of Banaskantha. Was it a mere coincidence that the home 
minister had transferred DIG Vanzara as DIG Border Range to be posted at 
Banaskantha just days before Prajapati’s encounter?The 75-page discharge order 
devotes less than two pages to the CBI counsel’s contentions, reflecting the 
increasing sparseness of the challenge posed by the prosecuting agency. Shah’s 
application to the CBI court seeking exemption from appearance before the court 
during the hearings was barely contested. In November 2014, the CBI told the 
Supreme Court that it was no longer interested in pursuing its own challenge to 
the Bombay High Court order granting bail to police officer N K Amin. The CBI’s 
lily livered response to Shah’s voluminous discharge application and marathon 
three-day arguments was a perfunctory 15-20 minutes argument by a junior 
lawyer.The die had been cast on 16 May itself, when Amit Shah led the BJP’s 
electoral campaign delivering a rich harvest of parliamentary seats for the 
party. The reinstatement, one by one, of the entire phalanx of police officers 
accused of plotting and carrying out the abductions and killings, by the 
Gujarat government, was a sign of the times. Abhay Chudasama, accused of using 
Sohrabuddin’s gang to carry out a range of illegal activities, and accused of 
ultimately trapping him besides extorting money from the Patel brothers, has 
been reinstated as superintendent of police of the vigilance squad at 
Gandhinagar.The collapsing of the case against Shah will shake the foundations 
of the case, as the order has dismissed the motive behind the conspiracy as 
well as the bulk of evidence in one stroke. The order has wiped out the entire 
slate of the Supreme Court’s intervention, returning us to the stage before the 
CBI was asked to investigate the wider conspiracy angle. The discharge of the 
“lynchpin” of the conspiracy despite voluminous material providing strong 
grounds for proceeding with the trial will ultimately raise questions about 
judicial independence.Notes1 Amit Anilchandra Shah vs CBI, Mumbai, 30 December 
2014. The Court of Sessions for Greater Bombay.2 Amitbhai vs Central on 29 
October 2010, Gujarat High Court.3 “Another Top Cop under Scanner for ‘Erasing’ 
Amit Shah Reference in CD” by Neeraj Chauhan and Ujjwala Nayudu, The Indian 
Express, 27 July 2010.4 See “Geetha Johri Report Speaks of ‘Collusion of State 
Government’” by Neena Vyas, The Hindu, 5 May 2007.5 Rubabuddin Sheikh vs State 
of Gujarat reported in (2010) 2 SCC 200, p 217.6 Central Bureau Of 
Investigation vs Amitbhai Anil Chandra Shah And Anr on 27 September, 2012, 
Supreme Court of India.7 Narmada Bai vs State 0f Gujarat & Ors on 8 April, 
2011, Supreme Court.








                                          




                                          

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