This Article is From Aug 11, 2011

Gujarat riots: Narendra Modi govt targets another whistleblower cop?

Ahmedabad: Is another whistleblower cop in trouble in Narendra Modi's Gujarat?

Sources have told NDTV that the state government could soon file a chargesheet against IPS officer Rahul Sharma, who was served a showcause notice in February this year. The Modi government has charged Mr Sharma with giving call record details related to the 2002 post-Godhra riots to the Nanavati Commission without informing the government.

Phone records collected by Mr Sharma between February 27 and March 4, 2002, purportedly show that during the riots in Gujarat after the burning of the Sabarmati Express in Godhra on February 27, 2002,  rioters on the streets were in touch with policemen and politicians. The government has alleged that some of these records are inaccurate and that a CD given by Mr Sharma to the probe panel is doctored.

Mr Sharma is currently posted as Deputy Inspector General (DIG), armed units, in Rajkot. He was the Deputy Commissioner of Police in the Control Room at the time of the riots. In February this year, he was served the showcause notice detailing the charges against him and asking why he should not be chargesheeted.

Mr Sharma had moved court asking why documents were not been given to him which could help him build defence in replying to an earlier showcause notice.

Mr Sharma's case has sparked off more political sparring. "The BJP government  in Gujarat is stifling all opinion which goes against them," Union Minister for Information and Broadcasting, Ambika Soni, said.

Congress spokesperson Manish Tiwari was stronger in his criticism. "The Gujarat government is pulling out all stops to see that the truth about the Gujarat massacre remains buried forever. We had earlier pointed out that the allegations made by Mr. Sanjiv Bhatt are extremely serious in nature because they deal with travesty and obstruction of justice, " he said.

Earlier this week, the Gujarat government suspended police officer Sanjeev Bhatt. The 1988-batch IPS officer was served a five-page suspension letter by the state Home Department, charging him with unauthorised absence.

Mr Bhatt's suspension order came just three days after he told the Supreme Court that the state government, which is meant to prosecute those accused of the communal riots of 2002, has actually been leaking information for use in their defence.

Mr Bhatt made headlines in the last few months after he told the Supreme Court that he attended a meeting on February 27, 2002 which was chaired by Chief Minister Narendra Modi. Five days before that meeting, 59 people were killed in a train near Godhra; most of them were kar-sevaks on their way back from Ayodhya. Communal tension was surging through the state.

Mr Bhatt was posted with the State Intelligence Bureau at the time. He has said that at the meeting, the Chief Minister told the policemen to remain indifferent to calls of help from those being attacked by rioters.

.