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Some Questions about the
Counter-Terror Operation at Jamia Nagar, New Delhi
20th
Septmebr 2008
A team comprising activists, academicians and journalists
visited the site of the police operation against alleged terrorists
staying in an apartment in Jamia Nagar in the afternoon of 20.09.2008
(Saturday). Two alleged terrorists Atif and Sajid, along with Mohan
Chand Sharma, an inspector of the Delhi Police's Special Cell died in
the operation while a third alleged terrorist was arrested.
On the basis of our interactions with the local
residents, eye witnesses and the reports which have appeared in the
media, we would like to pose the following questions:
1) It has been widely reported that in early August
this year Atif, who is described by the Delhi Police as the mastermind
behind the recent terrorist bombings in Jaipur, Ahmedabad and Delhi,
underwent a police verification exercise along with his four roommates
in order to rent the apartment they were staying in Jamia Nagar. All the
five youth living in the apartment submitted to the Delhi police their
personal details, including permanent address, driving license details,
address of the house they previously stayed in, all of which were found
to be accurate. Though the police is now denying the veracity of the
verification form, Mr. Rehman, the caretaker of the flat, has vouched,
on camera, that he accompanied Atif to the Police Station for the
verification.
Is it conceivable that the alleged kingpin behind
the terrorist Indian Mujahideen outfit would have wanted to undergo a
police verification- for whatever purpose- just a week after the
Ahmedabad blasts and a month before the bombings in Delhi?
2) The four-storeyed house L-18 in Jamia Nagar,
where the alleged terrorists were staying, has only one access point,
through the stair case, which is covered by an iron grill. It is
impossible to leave the house except from the staircase. By all reports,
the staircase was taken over by the Special Cell and/ or other agencies
during the counter-terror operation. The house, indeed the entire block,
was cordoned off at the time of the operation.
How then was it then
possible, as claimed by the police, for two alleged terrorists to escape
the premises during the police operation?
3) The media has quoted 'police sources' as having
informed them that the Special Cell was fully aware about the presence
of dreaded terrorists, involved in the bombings in Jaipur, Ahmedabad and
Delhi, staying in the apartment that was raided.
Why was the late Inspector
Mohan Chand Sharma, a veteran of dozens of encounter operations, the
only officer in the operation not wearing a bullet proof vest? Was this
due to over-confidence or is there something else to his death during
the operation? Will the forensic report of the bullets that killed
Inspector Sharma be made public?
4) There are reports that towards the end of the
counter-terror operation, some policemen climbed on the roof of L-18
and fired several rounds in the air. Other policemen were seen breaking
windows and even throwing flower pots to the ground from flats adjacent
or opposite to L-18
Why was the police firing in
the air and why did it indulge in destruction of property around L-18
after the encounter?
5) The police officials claim that an AK-47 and
pistols were recovered from L-18.
What was the weapon that
killed Inspector Sharma? Was the AK-47 used at all and by whom? Going by
some reports that have appeared (see 'Times of India', 20.09.08), the
AK-47s have been used by the police only. Is it not strange that alleged
terrorists did not use a more deadly and sophisticated weapon like the
AK-47, which they purportedly possessed, preferring to use pistols?
We feel that there are far too many loose ends in the
current story of the police encounter at L-18 in Jamia Nagar. We demand
that a fair, impartial and independent probe into the incident be
initiated at the earliest to answer the above questions as also any
other ones that arise from the contradictions of the case.
Signed/- Shabnam Hashmi, Satya Sivaraman,
Manisha Sethi, Tanweer Fazal, Arshad Alam, Neshat Quaiser, Pallavi Deka |