The Wire: Guwahati: Wednesday, September 26,
2018.
Efforts to obtain information on the
Assam government’s plan to initiate action against three senior Indian Police
Service (IPS) officers allegedly involved in rhino killings and a chit fund
scam have hit a dead end. Applications seeking information under the RTI Act
have either been ignored or transferred to another department.
In 2014-15, the Vigilance and
Anti-Corruption Department of Assam Police had submitted two enquiry reports to
the Home and Political Affairs Department of the state government which is
under chief minister Sarbananda Sonowal.
While one details the involvement of an
inspector general of police in the killing of rhinos at the Kaziranga National
Park, the other reveals how two officers of the rank of additional director
general helped promote the illicit chit fund scheme of the Kolkata-based
Saradha Group of Companies which went bust in 2013.
Usually, when any department submits such
reports against officials, the next step is an open enquiry which has so far
not been done in these cases in Assam. The officers can be chargesheeted only
if the open enquiry finds them guilty.
This correspondent had filed the first
RTI application on May 17, 2017, before the Department of Home and Political
Affairs which listed ten requests for information focusing primarily on the
reasons behind the delay in commissioning an open enquiry and its opinion on
the reports submitted by the Vigilance and Anti Corruption Department. No reply
was received on this application.
There was also no information on the
second RTI application as well which was submitted on 24 July this year. A
reply was received from joint secretary and information officer N.C. Basumatary
of the department after the first appellate authority was reminded about the
application on September 4. The reply said that the application has been
“transferred” to the office of the director general of police under Section
6(3) of RTI Act 2005. However, most of the questions in the application were
meant for the department rather than the police.
Some senior bureaucrats are of the view
that the government ought to have taken the cases to a logical conclusion given
the grave nature of the charges and the evidence specified in the reports. “We
are extremely surprised why the government has chosen to remain silent when
there was also a commitment to put an end to misgovernance by the BJP-led
government,” said a secretary of a department on condition of anonymity. He
referred to a “powerful lobby” that seemed to have scuttled further probe into
these incidents.
It may be mentioned that the chief
minister has been repeatedly declaring that there would be no compromise on
corruption. Soon after he assumed office, the CM’s Special Vigilance Cell which
is headed by a superintendent of police was activated to enquire and
investigate into “special and sensitive offences” committed by state government
officials.
Senior police officers claim that in the
episode of rhino killings, the inspector general had firmed up a deal with an
overground militant leader and his bodyguards for executing the crime. “There
is a suspicion that the bodyguards of the officer were also involved. It is not
known how many rhinos were slaughtered but the profits from selling the horn
were shared by all members of the gang. There are agents waiting to purchase
the horn in Dimapur which is not far from Kaziranga,” a deputy inspector
general of police claimed.
On the chit fund scheme they alleged that
the two additional director generals accepted hefty amounts from Saradha Group
for protection and promotion of the illegitimate business which began to
proliferate in Assam from 2010. Offices were set up across the state, agents
recruited for gathering investments from the lower income group sections and
two daily newspapers launched in Guwahati as well for brand promotion. Chairman
Sudipto Sen was often seen moving around with armed police personnel whenever
he landed in Guwahati during 2010-12. In April 2013, he was arrested from
Sonmarg in Jammu and Kashmir almost a week after he went missing from Kolkata.
When asked to explain the transfer of the
application, joint secretary N.C. Basumatary said that the home department
wanted to know the “latest status” of the case from the police. “In the home
department, there is a cell called Political Vigilance Department and we had
asked them to furnish the documents. We don’t have any materials now and I will
ask Avdesh Kumar who is in charge of vigilance under the home department to
check once again,” he said.
(The story will be updated whenever a
reply is received on the RTI Application.)
Rajeev Bhattacharyya is a senior
journalist in Guwahati and author of Rendezvous With Rebels: Journey to Meet
India’s Most Wanted Men And Lens and The Guerrilla: Insurgency in India’s
Northeast.