Former judge Ranjit Singh files criminal complaint against Sukhbir Badal\, Majithia

Former judge Ranjit Singh files criminal complaint against Sukhbir Badal, Majithia

Press Trust of India  |  Chandigarh 

Former Ranjit Singh, who headed a panel probing incidents of sacrilege and police firing in Punjab, has filed a criminal complaint against and senior Akali leader Majithia for making "false, derogatory and defamatory" statements against him.

The petitioner in his complaint to the and Haryana High Court, claimed that both Badal and Majithia made "derogatory statements against him with an intention to bring him as well as headed by him into disrepute".

"Thus committing offence punishable in terms of Section 10-A of The Commissions of Inquiry Act, 1952", the petition stated.

Under the section 10-A, if anybody was found to be involved in bringing the commission or its member to disrepute with defamatory statements, then this offence can be punishable with six months imprisonment or fine or both.

Justice (Retd) in his petition quoted several incidents in which he found that Badal and Majithia were making "derogatory statements" against him and the commission.

"It was stated that the of the commission, i.e. the present complainant, was neither a 'Justice' nor a 'Singh'. By saying so, Respondent No 1 (Sukhbir) not only attacked the religious status of the present complainant, but also attacked his status as a former of this Hon'ble Court", the petition stated.

"In the same breath, Respondent No 1 went on to claim that the present complainant did not even possess a valid degree of law; and indicated that the present complainant had been long operating on the basis of a fake degree of law," said the petition.

The petitioner also referred an incident in which he said that Badal and Majithia, during a public demonstration, described his inquiry report as "waste paper, deserving to be relegated to the trash bin", it said.

"It may be relevant to state that, as part of the said demonstration(s), Respondents No.1 and 2, placed a pile of paper, purporting it to be the Inquiry Report, on the ground, in the most demeaning manner," petitioner said.

Notably, the government after coming to power in 2017 had set up the Justice Commission to probe sacrilege and police firing incidents, including those that took place during previous SAD-BJP regime in 2015. The commission's report was tabled in Assembly last year.

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First Published: Fri, February 08 2019. 14:10 IST