Clean chit to Angaria eight
OUR CORRESPONDENT
Midnapore, May 28: A West Midnapore court today acquitted eight CPM activists in the 2001 Chhoto Angaria massacre for lack of evidence after an eight-year trial.
“The CBI could not establish the crimes allegedly committed by the accused. They were acquitted from the case on benefit of doubt,” said Biswanath Ghosh, the counsel for the accused, reading from the judgment.
Ghosh said the eight were acquitted because none of the charges — of murder, kidnapping with intention to murder, criminal conspiracy, arson, unlawful assembly with deadly weapons and illegal possession of arms — could be established. Two of the acquitted are CPM district committee leaders.
On the night of January 4, 2001, alleged CPM activists set fire to a house belonging to Trinamul Congress worker Abdur Baktar Mondal in Chhoto Angaria, West Midnapore, killing 11 Trinamul and People’s War Group activists. The CBI later said in its chargesheet that only five people, not 11, were killed.
The government ordered a CID probe, but Trinamul demanded a CBI inquiry. The government allowed it after a high court order.
Today, Shyamal Sengupta, the West Midnapore fifth additional district sessions judge, acquitted Tapan Ghosh and Sukur Ali, the members of the West Midnapore district committee, and the others.
One accused was murdered in 2004. Five are in hiding.
Nearly 3,000 CPM activists had assembled in the court this morning. Truckloads of activists came from Murshidabad to greet the eight.
“When they came out of jail, we garlanded them. They were taken in a procession to the Midnapore party office where a reception was held,” said district DYFI leader Sarfaraj Khan.
CBI lawyer Tapas Bose termed the verdict a “shame on Bengal”. “The state did not cooperate with us.... At least 17 of the 35 witnesses turned hostile because of threats,” he said, adding the agency would move a higher court.
Biman Bose, the CPM state secretary, said the verdict had made it “clear that they (the accused) were framed”.
Trinamul state president Subrata Bakshi said his party would launch a “political campaign against the acquittal”.
The above is another example of the miscarriage of justice when people accused of heinous crimes like rape, extortion and murder are given bail. The injustice is further aggravated when the state goes all out in support of the criminals.
The left front government uses all the means at its disposal to disuade witnesses for giving evidence.
I would have been surprised if the accused had been convicted.
Where are those NGO's like Stelvad who revived cases when there was miscarriage of justice in Gujarat, or, are there sympathies only there when minorities are involved so that there names are flashed in the papers.
It was an open and shut case.
CPM goons had committed the murders.
The state government dragged the case for eight years and did not cooperate with the CBI.The CBI themeselves have said so above.
Result - criminals have been freed.
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1 comment:
tapan ghosh has re-joined his school where he was a teacher..
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