Ishrat Jahan encounter: Chidambaram slams Modi Govt

September 11, 2009 04:42 pm | Updated December 04, 2021 10:48 pm IST - Washington/Ahmedabad

Home Minister P Chidambaram flanked by Indian Ambassador to US, Meera Shankar and Embassy Spokesperson, Rahul Chhabra during a press conference in Washington on Thursday. Photo: PTI

Home Minister P Chidambaram flanked by Indian Ambassador to US, Meera Shankar and Embassy Spokesperson, Rahul Chhabra during a press conference in Washington on Thursday. Photo: PTI

The Union Home Minister P Chidambaram on Friday slammed the Gujarat Government in the controversial Ishrat Jahan encounter saying it can’t justify the killings using central intelligence inputs as conclusive proof inviting a harsh response in which the Centre was described as being “nervous“.

“If a state government acts as though intelligence inputs are evidence or conclusive proof, I am sorry for that state government... Certainly no one suggested that based on an intelligence input you should kill someone,” he told a press conference here joining issue with the Narendra Modi Government over the central government affidavit in the killing of Ishrat and three of her companions in June 2004.

“I think too much is being attributed to that affidavit if it is meant to defend the government of Gujarat against the excesses that may have been committed by its police. I am sorry for the government of Gujarat and the manner in which it runs its police administration,” he said.

“What did the affidavit say?” he asked and added: “To the best of my knowledge the affidavit says that intelligence inputs were shared with the Gujarat government.”

Responding to Mr. Chidambaram’s remarks, Gujarat government spokesman Jai Narayan Vyas said the Centre was becoming “nervous” in the backdrop of its affidavit which described the four victims as terror suspects. The Gujarat government cited the affidavit after magistrate S P Tamang report said the encounter was fake and executed in cold blood.

“The Government of India for the last two or three days have gone so much nervous that they are trying to make statements which are absolutely nervousness, not taking into consideration the process of law and totally disbelieving in this entire process,” Mr. Vyas said.

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