Since long, we have been
witnessing one police officer after another, jailed for fake encounters in
Gujarat, being released on bail, or reinstated by the Gujarat government.
What is even more startling is the position that investigating agency, the CBI,
has been taking in the courts. When the Bombay High court granted bail to N.K.
Amin in the Sohrabuddin fake encounter case in March 2013, the CBI
contested it and filed a cancellation of bail petition before the Supreme Court.
When
this cancellation petition was listed in the Supreme Court on 11th November
2014, former BJP Spokesperson and current Additional Solicitor General (ASG)
Pinky Anand appeared on behalf of CBI. The CBI’s U-turn in the case was
striking. Whereas earlier, it had sought the cancellation of the bail, it did
not do so now. N.K. Amin, who is also an accused in the Ishrat Jahan encounter
case, meanwhile filed a SPECIAL Leave Petition in the Supreme Court seeking bail in the
Ishrat Jahan matter on the ground that the charge sheet was not filed in 90
days. Again, it was Ms. Anand who represented the CBI. While no one denies the
right of the accused to seek bail, fairness demands that those who have
publicly defended the Ishrat Jahan encounter as genuine, and have cast
aspersions on the line of enquiry being pursued by the CBI should at least not
represent the CBI in this matter. Ms. Anand, in her position as the
spokesperson of her party questioned the move by the CBI to take on record the
letter that D.G. Vanzara wrote from the prison or to investigate the
allegations made in the letter (see full video here). It would be a travesty of justice if Ms. Anand
continues to represent the CBI in an investigation she has questioned in the
past. The flip-flops by the CBI in the recent days also raise fears about the
independence of investigating agencies. Hence justice delayed is justice
denied.
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