The colonel in his element

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The colonel in his element

THE WEEK investigates Malegaon accused Prasad Purohit's crimes and defence

By Payal Saxena/Delhi, Mumbai & Pune



Clad in a crisp, pink shirt and black trousers, with an air of confidence and a smile on his face, Lieutenant Colonel Prasad Srikant Purohit—believed to be the main conspirator of the bomb blasts in Malegaon, Maharashtra, in September 2008 that killed seven people—walked into the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) court in Mumbai on July 11. The National Investigation Agency had requested the court for permission to interrogate Purohit in the blasts case. Accompanying him were two other accused—Major (retd) Ramesh Shivji Upadhyay, former president of Abhinav Bharat Sanghatana, a Hindu nationalist organisation with which Purohit was closely associated, and Sudhakar Dwivedi alias Dayanand Pandey alias Swami Amrutanand Tirth alias Shankaracharya, who allegedly gave ideological and monetary support to the organisation. Purohit's wife, Dr Aparna, a homoeopath, who had been eagerly awaiting his arrival from Taloja Jail near Panvel since morning, stood there with a calm expression.

The hearing was adjourned. On July 19, the court allowed the NIA to interrogate him in police custody from July 22 to July 28, and the agency planned to take him out of Maharashtra. But on July 23, the High Court stayed the order. The NIA can, however, interrogate him in jail, but has to appeal once again to question him in police custody.
Purohit and co., including the squint-eyed sanyasin Sadhvi Pragya Thakur, who is in the custody of Madhya Pradesh Police in connection with the murder of the 2007 Samjhauta Express blast suspect Sunil Joshi, are the alleged key players in the theatre of Hindu terror, a term which gained currency after the Malegaon blasts. Purohit and 11 others were arrested by Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad chief Hemant Karkare, who died fighting terrorists in the 2009 Mumbai terror attacks. A staunch follower of Hindutva nationalist Veer Savarkar, Purohit was accused of colluding with other suspects like Pragya and was charge-sheeted by the ATS.

The probe into Hindu terror, which slowed down after Karkare's death, got a shot in the arm when the Rajasthan ATS, which was probing the 2007 Ajmer dargah blast, arrested Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh pracharaks Devendra Gupta and Lokesh Sharma. Another breakthrough came on November 19, 2010, when the Central Bureau of Investigation arrested Aseemanand, a 60-year-old Gujarat-based sanyasi, for his alleged involvement in the blast in Hyderabad's Mecca Masjid in 2007 that killed 16 people. Aseemanand confessed to his involvement in the blasts in Ajmer and Mecca Masjid and agreed to cooperate with the investigation. On January 15 this year, a Panchkula court recorded his confession regarding the Samjhauta Express blast near Panipat that killed 68 passengers, many of whom were Pakistanis. But about a month later, he retracted his confession.

"How many terrorists have you trained in the jungles, Purohit?'' was the question put to the colonel by his senior officer on October 24, 2008, at the commandant's office. What followed was his detention, interrogation and arrest by the Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad, the CBI, Haryana Police and finally the NIA. However, the NIA is yet to further investigate the case and point out the lacunae in the 2008 Malegaon blast case and link it to the 2006 Malegaon blast case. He was also not named in the charge-sheet in the Samjhauta Express blast case, which was filed in June.

THE WEEK gained exclusive access to the interrogation reports of Purohit and Pragya. Even as both the accused have been careful not to reveal much about each other's meetings and conversations, it is clear that they had been in touch since April 2008. It is also evident that there were clandestine meetings to discuss targeting Muslim-dominated areas.

But there are several missing links. According to the interrogation report, soon after the 2008 Malegaon blasts, Purohit met Pragya, a history postgraduate with links to several BJP and Sangh parivar leaders, at her Jabalpur ashram, where he reportedly boasted that he was responsible for the blast. However, she told him that it was her men who did it and showed him two rail tickets as proof. Purohit's lawyer could latch on to this statement to plead his client's innocence. During the several rounds of interrogation, Purohit did not reveal any information on the Samjhauta Express blasts or the Malegaon blasts. The ATS could not extract anything out of him during his narco analysis.

"There was no substantial evidence against him to link him [Purohit] to the Malegaon blasts," said a senior intelligence officer. This is not the first time Purohit has been rescued. Earlier this year, Purohit's Court of Inquiry was set aside by the Armed Forces Tribunal, as some witnesses had been cross-examined in his absence. Neela Gokhale, his lawyer in the AFT, pointed out that as per Army Rule 180, he should have been given full opportunity of being present throughout the proceedings.

Aseemanand, who is now in judicial custody and is named in the Samjhauta Express blasts by the NIA, had divulged a lot of information, but he did not link Purohit to the blasts directly. Purohit's lawyer, Shrikant Shivade, argued that his involvement with Hindutva outfits could be part of his Military Intelligence training. Purohit used to embed himself in organisations to collect information. Shivade had produced a document dated February 20, 2007 which quoted Purohit's annual confidential report: "The officer infiltrated the SIMI and other underground outfits in the region through his capabilities and go-getter attitude." Since his area was close to the border of Gujarat-Maharashtra, he tried building a rapport with every organisation of the area.

However, Aparna believes that her husband joined the Sanghatana with honest intentions. "Purohit was a member of the Sanghatana, but that was solely to motivate and encourage the youth. This cannot be used as evidence against him," she said.

The most important charge against Purohit is that he procured 60kg of RDX, which was seized from Jammu and Kashmir in 2006. A part of it was allegedly used in the Samjhauta Express and Malegaon blasts. The Maharashtra ATS accused him of giving a portion of the substance to an Indore-based godman named Bhagwan. A witness told the ATS that Purohit had collected the RDX from Kashmir and had thrown some of it into the river Chenab. He also said Purohit had shown him the RDX, which was kept in a green sack in a cabinet in his computer table in his house at the Deolali camp in Nashik.

However, sources in the defence ministry and the Army rubbished the allegation. "It is the most ridiculous allegation made against him. It is not possible for an Army officer to sneak and steal seized material, as every possible seizure has to be made public to a team of officers, recorded and handed over to the ordnance factory or destroyed. No one can even touch the confiscated arms, ammunition, explosives and run away with it. This charge, in itself, will make the case fall flat," they said. Said Gokhale: "Colonel Purohit is being tried for the charge of stealing RDX from a seizure during his posting in J&K in the criminal court and thus cannot be tried in the AFT. Anyway, we have completely denied the charge and out of 71 Army officers who deposed before the court, about 57 supported Purohit."

Interestingly, the witness later told the court that he had confessed under duress. In addition, Shivade submitted that the Military Intelligence had found an ATS officer in Purohit's room on November 3, 2008, and that it was later that the ATS collected RDX swabs from the same house. "How can one be sure that the RDX was not planted in his room?" asked Shivade. The Maharashtra ATS, which had seized Purohit's computer, is tightlipped on whether or not it contained crucial information. The laptop could contain the names of 54 persons who underwent training in handling arms and explosives at the RSS-run Bhonsala Military School in Nashik in 2001.

< Read more in the link....>

In Ujjain, he told Pragya that the bomb used for the 2008 Malegaon blast was planted in her motorcycle and that he had erased its chassis number. Though she had sold it to RSS pracharak, Sunil Joshi, investigators later found that it belonged to the sanyasin. Unlike the firebrand nun, Purohit has not left behind any footprints, except for a few conversations that don't substantiate any evidence, and witnesses to nail him.
There it is , the bogey of "Hindu Terror" getting exposed --- as expected. One by one all these foisted cases will fall flat and lets see where Mr.Chidambaram and Diggy will bury their sorry faces then.
 
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Energon

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Wow, you are so right. The hoax has finally been exposed. Now the entire world will finally learn the truth that there is no such thing as "Hindu terrorism" it's merely a bogeyman to keep the heat off Muslims and giving them the chance to put their plan in motion of conquering India.
 

jamwal

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It's no wonder that news channels and papers have been absolutely quite on this one. nary a squeak from those asses till now
 

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