Former cops Vanzara\, Amin discharged from Ishrat Jahan case

Former cops Vanzara, Amin discharged from Ishrat Jahan case

Press Trust of India  |  Ahmedabad 

A special court here Thursday discharged former police officers D G Vanzara and N K Amin from the alleged fake encounter case.

Special court J K Pandya said that since the government did not sanction their prosecution, their were allowed and proceedings against them would be dropped in the case.

Under section 197 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the government's sanction is necessary for the prosecution of a public servant for an act done as part of the official duty.

Ishrat, a 19-year-old from Mumbra near Mumbai, Javed Shaikh alias Pranesh Pillai, and were killed by the Police in an encounter on the outskirts of Ahmedabad on June 15, 2004.

The police claimed they were terrorists and planning to kill the then

While the CBI had refused to take any stand on the state government's decision to decline sanction to prosecute the two former police officers, mother of Jahan, Shamima Kauser, had opposed their applications.

In a submission made through her Vrinda Grover, Kauser had earlier said that their pleas seeking dropping of proceedings were "untenable in law and unsustainable on facts" and that the was "not the appropriate authority" to refuse sanction to prosecute the two officers.

"It is a matter of record that it is the and not the state of Gujarat, which is the appropriate sanctioning authority in the present case, she had said.

Vanzara's V D Gajjar had defended the pleas seeking dropping of proceedings, saying the court cannot determine the validity of the sanction order and any review was not possible.

He had said that judicial findings in the case had established that there was no "fake encounter" on the part of the police officers.

Gajjar had said the sanction for prosecution was declined after the went through the material on record, examined fully the facts and circumstances of the case.

On August 7, 2018, the court had rejected the of Vanzara and Amin, and also sought to know from the CBI whether the agency had requested the government for a sanction to prosecute them, so that the court could frame charges against them and start the trial.

A Special Investigation Team (SIT) set up by the had later concluded that the encounter was fake, after which the HC had transferred the case to the CBI.

In the first charge-sheet filed by the investigative agency in 2013, seven officers, including IPS officers P P Pandey, Vanzara and G L Singhal, were named as accused. The court had later discharged

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, May 02 2019. 13:45 IST