“With his military intelligence background and knowledge of interrogation 
procedures, this strategy to derail investigation in the event of being 
arrested was designed by Purohit,” said a police officer involved in the probe
 
Suspects were trained to lie



//



Stavan Desai & Presley Thomas, Hindustan Times



http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/StoryPage.aspx?sectionName=HomePage&id=e7f26f40-accf-4ddb-84fe-7b6c5fcdce2d&&Headline=Malegaon+blast+suspects+were+trained+to+lie
 
Mumbai, November 26, 2008
“Injure yourself if you have to”; “complain of torture”; “make personal, 
embarrassing allegations against the police in court.”

These are some instructions members of the radical Hindu group Abhinav Bharat – 
under investigation for its involvement in the Malegaon blast – were given at a 
training camp conducted by Lt Col Prasad Purohit at Pachmarhi, Madhya Pradesh, 
earlier this year.
The September 29 blast in a crowded marketplace in Maharashtra’s powerloom town 
claimed six lives.
Investigators found details of these training sessions in Purohit’s laptop, 
which was recovered after his arrest on November 5. Hindustan Times had access 
to the armyman’s detailed lecture notes. Officials said at least 30 senior 
Abhinav Bharat members attended these sessions, referred to in the laptop as 
personality development workshops.
The allegations made by Purohit, Sadhvi Pragya Singh Thakur and the other 
co-accused at the special Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) 
court on Monday are very similar to the instructions in Purohit’s sessions. 
“With his military intelligence background and knowledge of interrogation 
procedures, this strategy to derail investigation in the event of being 
arrested was designed by Purohit,” said a police officer involved in the probe.
Maharashtra Director General of Police A.N. Roy said these are delay tactics. 
“It is becoming common to level allegations against investigators, to slow down 
the probe and to make investigators wary,” he said.
The court on Monday denied the Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) custody 
of seven of the 11 accused, a major setback and embarrassment for the police. 
The sadhvi was the first to file an affidavit that the ATS had tortured her.
“It’s a procedure straight out of the Al Qaeda manual. Once a precedent is set, 
everybody follows suit,” said advocate Raja Thackeray, who specialises in 
criminal matters.
The allegations are similar to those made by the July 11/7 train blasts accused 
and Indian Mujahideen members, arrested for their links with the blasts in 
Ahmedabad and Delhi.


With Regards 

Abi


      

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