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The wife of one of the accused who was killed in police custody told the Indian Express, “When I went to see him at the police station, he told me about the torture, the merciless beating and atrocities by drunken policemen,” Mamta said.
Moments later, a police team with the Shimla SP and deputy commissioner Rohan Chand Thakur picked the wife up from the house and drove off.
A day after Himachal Pradesh Governor Acharya Devvrat asked the state government to give a detailed report on the status of the probe in the Kotkhai rape and murder case, Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh called on him at the Raj Bhawan, on Thursday.
During the half-an-hour meeting, Singh apprised the governor of the steps being taken by the government, according to officials.
Singh assured the Governor that appropriate action would be taken and no person involved in the heinous crime would be spared, the officials said. He further added the state government was very serious and committed to take the probe to the logical conclusion and get the guilty punished.
Citing the transfer police officer Zahur H Zaidi, Singh asserted that action had already been taken against the police personnel for lapses and the concerned senior officers had been shifted.
Top Himachal Pradesh Police officer Zahur H Zaidi, who headed the SIT probing the gangrape and murder of a schoolgirl, was transferred hours after one of the suspects was found murdered in a lock-up.
Shimla Superintendent of Police DW Negi, who was known for his proximity to Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh, and his deputy Bhajan Dev Negi were also transferred on Wednesday.
The Opposition Bharatiya Janata Party called a day-long protest in the state capital over the deteriorating law and order situation, which began on Thursday morning. While all shops, private business establishments were closed in Shimla, vehicular movement was also hampered.
The Himachal Pradesh High Court on Wednesday handed over the investigation into the Kotkhai gangrape and murder case and also the custodial death of one of the accused to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).
A division bench of the High Court consisting of acting Chief Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice Sandeep Sharma directed the CBI to constitute a three-member SIT, headed by an officer not below the rank of SP, along with two DSPs, and start investigations.
The court also asked the state police to hand over the entire record of the case to the CBI and also took on record the affidavits filed by the Director General of Police (DGP) Somesh Goel, who was present at the court.
An angry mob went on the rampage, ransacking a police station and pelting policemen with stones after a Nepalese labourer, held in connection with the case was allegedly killed in the lock-up by another accused, officials said.
According to reports, Singh, was allegedly killed by the main accused, Rajender Singh, following a scuffle on the night of 18 July in his jail cell at Kotkhai police station. A crowd pelted stones and protested outside the police station following Suraj’s death.
People of Shimla took to the streets to demand justice for ‘Gudia’. An angry mob threatened to sit on an indefinite strike. In Theog, thousands of protesters gathered, ransacking police vehicles and engaging in minor altercations with police, all to demand a CBI probe into the case.
On 14 July, 80-100 hundred women from Kotkhai gathered and sat on the Hindustan-Tibet National Highway, blocking the path for hours from 9:30 am, demanding a CBI probe into Gudia’s case.
The Special Investigating Team from the state, which was earlier probing the case, arrested six suspects on 13 July, including two people from Nepal. While police said that initial investigation indicated that the attack was not “pre-planned” attack, they asserted that all the six accused were drunk.
The vehicle carrying the accused to Shimla for medical examination was reportedly attacked by some people, while a large number of people gathered at the Deen Dayal Upadhyay Hospital, where the accused were to be taken.
However, people belonging to the region alleged that there were lapses in the investigation and that police did not arrest the “real suspects who belonged to influential families”.
On 14 July, the Himachal Pradesh government gave in to public demand and announced that the case will be handed over to the Central Bureau of Investigation.
An eyewitness told The Quint that after the government order announcing the handing over of the case to CBI, there were many whispers about how the “power of people to protest in democracy is important.”
Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh, following the widespread protests, decided to hand over the case to CBI “in view of the public sentiments and gravity of the crime”.
While he said that the protesters did not have any reason to agitate, he also alleged that if there is a “political hand in this, it will be dealt with sternly.”
(With PTI inputs)
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