"However, police sources told Arab News that Gafoor has been made a scapegoat 
by the Congress-led Democratic Front government and that it had used Gafoor 
when it needed prior to state assembly polls after which they dumped him. The 
chances of a minority IPS police officer, a Muslim, heading the state police 
force for the first time have now evaporated into thin air. The mind-boggling 
question that still remains to be answered is why the acting state DGP Anami 
Narayan Roy, who was the DGP then, and should have been in the command, was 
left scot-free and why the services of terrorism expert and former DGP S.S. 
Virk were not requisitioned by the government, the sources asked"


With Regards 

Abi
 


“At his best, man is the noblest of all animals; separated from law and justice 
he is the worst”
- Aristotle


--- On Wed, 12/23/09, Munawwar Kavungal <[email protected]> wrote:
 






DGP Gafoor in dock over Mumbai terror attacks


Shahid Raza Burney | Arab News 


 


NAGPUR: Giving a clean chit to senior police officials and the state 
government, the two-member Pradhan Committee’s report into last November’s 
Mumbai terror attacks blamed the then Mumbai police commissioner and presently 
director general of police (housing), Hassan Gafoor, for lack of leadership 
during the terror attacks.
The report cited several lapses on the part of Gafoor, adding that other police 
officials performed their duties sincerely.
In the covering letter attached to the 90 page report presented to Chief 
Minister Ashok Chavan in July, Ram Pradhan, chairman of the panel, said that 
Gafoor had failed in handling the terror attacks and that there was an absence 
of leadership on Gafoor’s part and lack of his visible command and control at 
his office.
Pradhan also stated in the covering letter that there were several lacunae in 
the working within the state government secretariat and the police 
administration. “Gafoor didn’t exhibit adequate initiative in handling the 
attack and remained rooted at one sport near the Trident Hotel throughout the 
operations … he failed to give any directions and had not enquired about the 
ongoing operations. During a crisis like the Mumbai terror attacks, Gafoor 
should have been in the command center in the control room which might have 
helped prevent duplication of efforts by different units,” Pradhan stated in 
the letter.
Giving a clean chit to the police and the state government, the panel said that 
they noticed no failure in acting on input provided by the federal intelligence 
agencies. The war-like attack was beyond the capacity of Mumbai police or any 
police set-up. It had to be tackled by specialized forces like the National 
Security Guards (NSG). The panel report also stated there were no serious 
lapses in the way Mumbai police acted and praised several police officers 
including lavishing praise on the role of Joint Commissioner of Police (Crime) 
Rakesh Maria.
The panel also again came down heavily on Hassan Gafoor, and said that he did 
not exhibit adequate initiative in handling the multi-pronged attack and 
remained at one spot near Trident Hotel through out the operations. For lack of 
command and control at the police commissioner’s office, an impression that the 
police handled the operation ineffectively was created in the eyes of the 
public.
On the criticism part in the report, the panel said that several senior 
officers told the panel that Gafoor did not give any directions nor enquired of 
ongoing operations during those three days of attacks. “We found that although 
Gafoor kept in touch on wireless and mobile on selective basis, several 
officers felt that they did not get a feeling that they were part of the team. 
The panel is of the view that Gafoor should have been in the command center in 
the control room,” the report stated.
However, police sources told Arab News that Gafoor has been made a scapegoat by 
the Congress-led Democratic Front government and that it had used Gafoor when 
it needed prior to state assembly polls after which they dumped him. The 
chances of a minority IPS police officer, a Muslim, heading the state police 
force for the first time have now evaporated into thin air. The mind-boggling 
question that still remains to be answered is why the acting state DGP Anami 
Narayan Roy, who was the DGP then, and should have been in the command, was 
left scot-free and why the services of terrorism expert and former DGP S.S. 
Virk were not requisitioned by the government, the sources asked.


      

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