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SC forms panel to probe killing of Telangana rape-murder accused

December 12, 2019 11:47 am | Updated November 28, 2021 10:57 am IST - New Delhi

The Telangana government justifies the 'encounter', saying the accused snatched two firearms and shot at a police party.

A team of NHRC headed by SSP Meerut Manzil Saini and Shamshabad Deputy Commissioner of Police N. Prakash Reddy visited the site of shoot-out.

The Supreme Court on Thursday set up an inquiry commission led by its former judge, Justice V.S. Sirpurkar, to probe the circumstances of the police ‘encounter’ accused in the gang-rape and murder of a veterinarian in Hyderabad. in December.

A Bench, led by Chief Justice of India Sharad A. Bobde, asked the inquiry commission, which includes former Bombay High Court judge, Justice Rekha Baldota, and the former CBI Director, D.R. Karthikeyan, to complete its investigation in six months. Advocate K. Parameshwar was appointed the counsel for the Inquiry Commission. The commission will sit in Hyderabad.

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A growing blot on the criminal justice system

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The apex court has, meanwhile, stayed the proceedings in the

Telangana High Court and the
National Human Rights Commission into the incident.

The Bench gave the Inquiry Commission six months to complete the probe. The Commission would sit in Hyderabad.

“We are of the considered view that there should be some enquiry,” CJI Bobde observed.

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Meanwhile, the court issued notice to the Press Trust of India and the Press Council of India, “who represent the electronic and print media in the country”, to respond in four weeks to a plea made by advocate M.L. Sharma to restrain media from reporting in the Inquiry Commission proceedings.

The Telangana government, represented by senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi, welcomed an impartial probe. “I (Telangana government) have no problem... There is no difficulty... A magisterial enquiry has also been ordered,” Mr. Rohatgi submitted.

Also read | Retributive justice: On Hyderabad vet rape and murder

The government said it had registered an FIR against the four dead accused for attempting to murder policemen. “We don't think your trial for non-existing, dead accused will take you anywhere,” CJI Bobde drily dismissed the submission.

The four accused — Mohammed Arif, Chintakunta Chennakeshavulu, Jollu Shiva and Jollu Naveen — were taken to the scene of the crime around 60 km from Hyderabad in the early hours of December 6 for a re-construction of crime scene. The Telangana government stuck to its version that the accused men surprised their police escort there, grabbed their guns and tried to kill the policemen to escape custody. The posse retaliated and the four were killed in the cross firing. However, the police team sustained no injuries in the incident, the State emphasised.

The petition filed by Supreme Court advocate and petitioner, G.S. Mani, had sought a CBI or a Special Investigation Team probe against Cyberabad Police Commissioner V.C. Sajjanar, who is a respondent in the petition. Mr. Mani had said the encounter was a red-herring, deliberately done to turn public attention away from the police's inability to prevent such crimes against women.

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