In a major
relief to Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) president Amit Shah, a special
CBI court in Mumbai on Tuesday Dec 30,2014 discharged him in the fake encounter
cases of Sohrabuddin Sheikh and Tulsiram Prajapati.
Special
CBI judge M.B. Gosavi found there was no direct evidence linking Shah
to the murders and that the central investigative agency had named him
as an accused based on inferences.
The
CBI had named Shah as conspirator in the fake encounter cases when he
was home minister of Gujarat. The CBI had claimed that phone call
records revealed that Shah was in touch with accused officers during the
‘operation’, thus giving credence to his involvement in the
conspiracy.
The
court debunked this conclusion on the grounds that there was nothing
unnatural in Shah talking on the phone to his officers.
“I
am of the opinion the inference drawn by the CBI is not accepted. The
entire record when considered in totality shows that there is no case
against applicant Shah,” reasoned judge Gosavi while discharging Shah
under Section 227 of the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC).
The
court also agreed with the defence counsel S.V. Raju’s contention that
Shah was falsely implicated in the case for political motives.
Note
Sohrabuddin,
a gangster whom the Gujarat police claimed had links with
Lashkar-e-Taiba, and his wife Kausar Bi, were allegedly abducted by
Gujarat ATS from Hyderabad on their way to Sangli in Maharashtra.
Sohrabuddin
was killed in a fake encounter near Gandhinagar in November 2005, after
which his wife disappeared and was believed to have been murdered.
Tulsiram,
an aide of the gangster and an eyewitness to the encounter, was
allegedly killed by police at Chapri village in Banaskantha district in
Gujarat in December 2006.
Shah
was alleged to have plotted the killings with some police officers. He
was arrested by the CBI in July 2010 and granted bail by the Supreme
Court three months later on October 29 on the condition that he did not
enter Gujarat.
The Sohrabuddin case was transferred to Mumbai in September 2012 at the CBI’s request for fair trial.
In 2013, the SC had clubbed Prajapati’s encounter case with that of Sohrabuddin.
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