http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/04/world/asia/indian-police-officer-says-leaders-approved-executions.html?_r=0

Indian Police Officer Says Leaders Approved ExecutionsBy HARI KUMARPublished:
September 3, 2013
NEW DELHI — A high-ranking Indian police officer awaiting trial on
suspicion of staging extrajudicial killings and passing them off as
shootings committed during major terrorism arrests accused political
leaders in the state of Gujarat on Tuesday of approving the executions.

The officer, D. G. Vanzara, said that two leaders of India’s opposition
Bharatiya Janata Party — Narendra Modi, Gujarat’s chief minister, and a
lieutenant, Amit Shah — had sanctioned the shootings, then allowed him and
32 other police officers to take the blame.

Mr. Vanzara’s accusation could prove damaging to Mr. Modi, the de facto
prime ministerial candidate for the Bharatiya Janata Party, which hopes to
win a majority in the 2014 parliamentary elections.

In a 
letter<https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B9aAj1yhm51pZ3h2X3lXRW5oRm8/edit?pli=1>
announcing
his resignation from the Gujarat police force, Mr. Vanzara described his
bitter disappointment with Mr. Modi, “whom I used to adore like a god.”

“But I am sorry to state that my god could not rise to the occasion under
the evil influence of Shri Amitbhai Shah, who usurped his eyes and ears and
has been successfully misguiding him” for 12 years, he wrote.

Mr. Vanzara and nearly three dozen other officials are accused of killing
Muslim suspects from 2002 to 2007, then telling the public that the victims
were important terrorists killed in “encounters” trying to elude arrest.

Mr. Vanzara said the police officers were carrying out the Gujarat
government’s “proactive policy of zero tolerance for terrorism” during a
period when Islamic militants threatened Gujarat.

He did not directly acknowledge staging encounters, but said that if the
charges were true, “we, being field officers, have simply implemented the
conscious policy of this government, which was inspiring, guiding and
monitoring our actions.”

Mr. Modi has not been charged in the Vanzara case, but he has long been
suspected of having played a role in the 2002 riots in
Gujarat<http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/27/world/religious-riots-loom-over-indian-politics.html?pagewanted=all&amp;src=pm>,
in which nearly 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, were killed. In previous
trials, witnesses have testified that Mr. Modi discouraged the police from
intervening.

Many of the victims’ families have successful pushed for
trials<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/04/world/asia/04ahmedabad.html?pagewanted=all>,
with some cases reaching the Supreme Court of India.

Jay Narayan Vyas, a spokesman for the government of Gujarat, played down
the importance of Mr. Vanzara’s letter, saying it “has no value.”

“He is a defendant; he is not a victim,” Mr. Vyas said in comments to NDTV,
an independent news channel, referring to Mr. Vanzara.

The letter came as good news for officials from the governing Congress
Party, who are preparing for a tough electoral challenge from Mr. Modi, who
presents himself as a pro-business, pro-development candidate.

“It further strengthens our view on Narendra Modi and what we have said in
the past,” said Ajay Maken, a Congress Party general secretary. “The kind
of misuse of police that has taken place during Mr. Modi’s regime is
unfortunate.”

Ellen Barry contributed reporting.



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