http://www.countercurrents.org/george250908.htm


*Mainstream Media Questions Delhi Encounter Killings*

*By L. George*

25 September, 2008
*Countercurrents.org*

*F*inally it has happened: the main stream media in India has for the first
time come out with something other than the 'official version' of the
encounter killings that have taken place in the country.

*NDTV Report*

An NDTV report with the headline 'Cover-up charges cling to terror probe'
has said that Delhi's latest terror spectre throws up contrasting images. A
police officer -- one of the finest -- shot 3 times. And, young, educated,
fun-loving men who, the police say, are deadly terrorists.

The police are convinced that Atif and his young group, most of them in
their 20s with the youngest just 17, is responsible for all the major blasts
in India this year and the death of nearly 150 people.

But now, a group of lawyers and human rights activists are raising
questions. They ask who are the two missing men, who escaped from the flat
in Batla house on the day of encounter. And how could they possibly escape
when the only way out was a narrow staircase and there were several
policemen in the area.

The other point is that the profiles of these young men seem to indicate
terror was the farthest thing in their minds. They were regular
college-going students.

One of those arrested, Zeeshan, was taking giving his exams on the day of
the encounter. He came on TV to surrender. Why didn't he run away?, asks
NDTV. The police say they have evidence that he planted the bomb at Delhi's
Barakhamba Road.

Another alleged Indian Mujahideen (IM) operative Saqib was also arrested. A
gold medalist in economics honours from Jamia Millia University, he was a
regular on Orkut. He maintained a profile like most users do and had a wide
circle of friends.

Cops claim the 23-year-old was involved in both Ahmedabad and Delhi blasts.
Saqib's family has countered the police claims and furnished documents to
show that Saquib appeared for six exams from the 23rd of July to the 28th
July -- the time that the police claim he was planning the blasts.

Shakib's brother says: "He was the topper in his class for the last two
years."

The house where the men were staying and its caretaker are also under the
scanner. The caretaker, who has worked in the PWD for several years, insists
that he gave the details of the men staying at his home to the police almost
a month before the blasts.

However, the police have now arrested him for forging these documents. His
son has also been arrested for alleged nexus with the terrorists.

There are several such questions to which there are still no easy answers.
And the police know they will have to find hard evidence to back each of
their claims. However, they say the death of Inspector Sharma proves there
was no fake encounter.

*Mail Today*

The Mali Today has also come out with a version raising many questions about
the encounter:

It says two eyewitnesses of the September 19 cell action at Jamia Nagar have
presented a version of the event that is at complete variance with what has
been offered by Delhi Police.

Their reconstruction of the event, which indicates a scuffle had probably
taken place before the shots were fired, many also explain why Jamia Nagar
residents are not buying the police theory that the team has either
eliminated or arrested the men allegedly behind the bomb blasts in Delhi,
Ahmedabad and Jaipur.

This version given to MAIL TODAY on the condition of anonymity, squares up
with the hitherto unreported autopsy report on Sharma and the nature of
wounds on the bodies of the two young men killed by the Special Cell of the
Delhi Police. The autopsy report on Sharma, which is with the Headlines
Today, says he was shot at from extremely close range, no more than a few
centimeters from him. he was hit by three bullets. All of them entered
through the back and followed a top-to-down trajectory.

The body of one of the 'terrorists' bears injury marks, sharp wounds and
multiple internal injuries in the stomach. Doctors say such injuries are
usually attributed to a scuffle, a violent physical assault. Someone may
even have stamped on him. His flatmate Mohammed Sajid also dead, was
apparently shot in the head. Could his death too have occurred during the
scuffle?

Further, could Inspector Sharma have been injured during the fisticuffs that
ensued between the alleged Delhi bombers and the policemen who were raiding
supposed terrorist hideouts? Is it possible that he suffered the injuries
when a bullet went off accidentally during the scuffle?

There is no way to find out the kind of bullet injury that Sharma suffered.
No bullets were found on his body during his autopsy. The medical bulletin
of Holy family Hospital, where he was taken first, said no "foreign bodies
were found in his chest and abdomen.

Mail Today took exhaustive eyewitness accounts of the police action on
September 19. Eyewitnesses, who live in the immediate vicinity of L-18,
Batla House - the alleged IM hideout - said the Special Cell team that
raided the scene of action brought two young men to the ground floor from
their fourth-floor flat. they had a verbal altercation with the two men and
killed them after some of them realised Sharma had been shot.

Jamia Nagar residents had been seeing heightened activity by the policemen
in civilian clothes for about a week before the police action. Yet, they
were taken aback when a group of policemen in civvies surrounded L-18, Batla
House, on September 19, for they had not seen any suspicious activity in
their building. It is hard to keep secrets in the rabbit warren of apartment
blocks in Jamia Nagar.

A member of the Special Cell first went up to the fourth-floor flat occupied
by Atif and Sajid, pretending to be a cellphone salesman. the young men
inside the flat did not receive the undercover policeman cordially. They
entered into an argument with sub-inspector Ddharmender, who was pretending
to be the salesman.

All this took place in front of the neighbours who had come out onto the
balconies of their flats on hearing the commotion. Reacting immediately when
the arguments started, the policemen waiting downstairs rushed up.

None of them had their guns out. Clearly, they were not expecting any armed
resistance. One of the men, whom the eyewitnesses were able to identify
after seeing his images on television, Sharma.

Speaking from behind a grill that covers the fourth-floor staircase at L-18,
Sharma yelled at all the neighbours who had come out of their houses to go
indoors because they could get hurt in the "firing". Residents of the area
followed his instructions. But the eyewitnesses, being quoted by the Mail
Today, watched the goings-on from behind their toilet windows.

They saw only two men in the flat. that leaves the man who was arrested from
the spot, Mohammed Saif, and the two men who reportedly escaped during the
police action unaccounted for.

They saw Sharma's men drag Atif and Sajid to the ground floor landing. The
two men, who were subsequently killed, appeared to be in panic and unarmed
at the time. No one could see what happened thereafter as the partly covered
ground floor landing was not in their line of vision.

The eyewitness could hear the policemen hurling abuses at the two youngmen.
This was followed by gunshots. Then someone shouted, "Sahab ko goli lag gayi
(the boss has been shot)." The young men could not be hard in this
commotion. After sometime, the eyewitnesses hear more gunshots. The
policemen came into the view of our eyewitnesses. They were dragging the
bodies of two men upstairs.

Around the same time, they saw sub-inspector Dharmender, and another
policeman leading Sharma out of the building. The eyewitness couldn't figure
out the extent of Sharma's injury from what they saw.

The bodies of two youngmen, meanwhile, were dragged up to their flat by the
policemen. Then they wrapped the bodies with cloth.

According to the eyewitnesses, after the two bodies were taken away and
piled into a police van, a group of policemen materialised out of the blue
with three young men they had rounded up, seemingly from within the L-18
flats. They were unable to make out where the men came from. One of them, it
appears now, was Mohammed Saif. He is now in the police custody.

The reconstruction by the eyewitnesses posed some questions. Why did two
young men, and their alleged accomplices, not flee the scene or clean up
their laptops even after everyone in the neighbourhood was aware of the
heightened police presence in the area?

Why did the policemen not have their guns out when they rushed up to the
flat after the argument broke out between sub-inspector Dharmender and the
two men?

Was Sharma shot at by the alleged terrorists or was he a victim of
collateral damage because he happened to be in the range of a ricocheting
bullet?

*'Multiple masterminds'*


We are also forced to take a new look at the announcements made by the
Police.


After killing the two youths Atif and Sajjid in Delhi, the special police
cell chief Karnal Singh claimed that they were the masterminds behind the
bombings of Uttar Pradesh courts (23 November, 2007), Jaipur bombings (13
May, 2008), Ahmedabad bombings (26 July, 2008), and Delhi bombings (13
September, 2008).

He also claimed that they were behind the Varanassi bombings of 2006 and
Gorakhpur bombings of 2007. If what the Delhi police claim is true, what
about the alleged mastermind that the Gujarat police arrested in connection
with Ahmedabad bombings, Abu Basher?

Gujarat Police claimed that he was the master mind of all these bombings.

On September 24th, Mumbai Police have also arrested new 'masterminds' of all
these blasts. Rajastan Police had arrested a cyber cafe owner, Shahbas
Hussain. They also claim that he was the mastermind of the Jaipur blasts.
Whom should we believe?


In the light of these revelations and views people in India and around the
world may adopt a new stand: not to swallow the official versions as such.

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