Ishrat Case: CBI Court Rejects Discharge Pleas of Vanzara and Amin

Ishrat Jahan’s mother told the court she was “murdered following a conspiracy between high-ranking police officers.”

PTI
India
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File image of retired IPS officer DG Vanzara. A special CBI court rejected the discharge applications of former police officers D G Vanzara & N K Amin.
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File image of retired IPS officer DG Vanzara. A special CBI court rejected the discharge applications of former police officers D G Vanzara & N K Amin.
(Photo: PTI)

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A special CBI court in Ahmedabad rejected the discharge applications of former police officers D G Vanzara and N K Amin in the case of alleged fake encounter of Ishrat Jahan and three others on 7 August, Tuesday. The discharge pleas were rejected by Special Judge J K Pandya.

Last month, the court concluded the hearing of arguments of the two accused retired police officers, the CBI and Ishrat Jahan's mother Shamima Kauser. Kauser had also challenged Vanzara's discharge plea.

Vanzara, a former deputy inspector general of police in Gujarat, had sought discharge on the ground of parity with the state’s former in-charge Director General of Police P P Pandey. He was discharged in the case in February this year for want of evidence against him.

Amin, who retired as the superintendent of police, sought his discharge on the ground that the encounter was genuine and that testimonies of witnesses produced by the CBI were not reliable.

Ishrat Jahan's mother sought to oppose the pleas of Amin and Vanzara, and told the court that her daughter was “murdered following a conspiracy between high-ranking police officers and others holding powerful and influential positions.”

She alleged that Vanzara played a “direct and key role” in the conspiracy behind the “staged encounter.”

Ishrat Jahan, a 19-year-old woman from Mumbra area of Thane district near Mumbai, and three others – Javed Shaikh alias Pranesh Pillai, Amjadali Akbarali Rana and Zeeshan Johar – were killed by the police in an “encounter” on the outskirts of Ahmedabad on 15 June, 2004. At that time, the police had claimed that the four had terror links and were allegedly plotting to kill the-then Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi.

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