Why the Haren Pandya Murder is Back in the Spotlight

Azam Khan’s deposition in the Sohrabbudin Sheikh case – that a Gujarat police officer ordered Pandya’s assassination – is being held out as grounds for a reinvestigation.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court reserved its order today on a public interest litigation (PIL) that sought a fresh investigation into the murder of former Gujarat home minister Haren Pandya. Pandya held the position before Narendra Modi became chief minister of the state and moved him to a less important portfolio.

The petition was prompted by evidence, which came to light in November 2018. Azam Khan, a state witness in another murder case – the custodial killing of Sohrabbudin Sheikh, Kauser Bi and Tulsiram Prajapati – said in his deposition in a trial court that Sohrabbudin told him that Pandya’s murder had been ordered by a top Gujarat police official, D.G. Vanzara.

Pandya was founded dead in his car on the morning of March 26, 2003, in Ahmedabad. The CBI charged 12 people for the killing, one of whom, Asghar Ali, was described as the gunman.

In 2007, a trial court in Gujarat convicted the 12 people for murder.  However, the high court in 2011, acquitted all of them, describing the entire investigation as motivated and “botched.” The CBI’s investigator at the time was Y.C. Modi, who is now the head of the National Investigation Agency

The CBI has appealed this acquittal in the Supreme Court, and arguments in the matter concluded before a bench comprising Justices Arun Misra and Vineet Saran last month.

On Tuesday, the same bench heard arguments from senior advocate Shanti Bhushan and his son Prashant Bhushan – the lawyers who filed the PIL. Solicitor general Tushar Mehta represented the union of India, arguing that there was no need to order a fresh investigation.

Also read: Explainer: Why There Is a Plea Seeking Re-Investigation of Haren Pandya’s Murder

How is the Sohrabuddin encounter linked to Pandya’s murder?

Azam Khan’s trial court deposition in the Sohrabbudin case has also come to be important in Haren Pandya’s case.

Sohrabuddin was a gangster who was killed in an encounter with his wife Kauser Bi in 2005 – two years after Pandya’s murder. BJP chief Amit Shah was arrested as an accused in Sheikh’s case. D.G. Vanzara, an important police officer in Gujarat, was also arrested.

Azam Khan was a prosecution witness in the Sohrabuddin case. In the trial last December, Khan said Sohrabuddin had told him that Vanzara had given out a contract to kill Pandya. Sheikh said his associates, Tulsiram Prajapati and others, had fulfilled that contract and murdered Pandya.

“During discussions with Sohrabuddin, he told me that he, along with Naeem Khan and Shahid Rampuri, got the contract to kill … Haren Pandya of Gujarat and they killed him. I felt sad and told Sohrabuddin that they have killed a good person. Thereafter, Sohrabuddin told me that this contract of killing was given to him by Vanzara,” said Azam Khan in his deposition. 

Khan told the court in November that he had disclosed all this to the CBI back in 2010, but was told to keep quiet about it.  His comments about those orders having come from “above” were ordered to be expunged from court records by the judge.

In December, all the accused in the Sohrabbudin encounter case were acquitted.

Which media reports have become key? 

Since the Gujarat high court acquitted all the accused in Pandya’s murder in 2011, some new pieces of information have come to light which may have bearings on the case.

All of this was brought to the judges’ notice in open court today and also recorded in the PIL.

In 2013, the Times of India reported that Vanzara told the CBI officers interrogating him that Pandya was killed as part of a political conspiracy.

In 2016, journalist Rana Ayyub published a book titled Gujarat Files, which had a transcript of her conversation with Y.A. Sheikh –  the Gujarat police officer who first handled the case before the CBI. He, too, said the investigation lacked integrity and was a political conspiracy. He named Vanzara as being involved in the conspiracy to murder Pandya.

Justice Arun Misra asked for a copy of the book and skimmed through it in court today.

Last month, Y.A. Sheikh told The Wire that the investigation should be reopened.

In November, The Wire reported, that even though Vanzara was not actively part of the investigation, he was present inside the post-mortem room and at the crime scene – instances of which were recorded in photos taken by the Gujarat police.

Justice Arun Misra expressed displeasure at news articles being cited in court for a plea seeking to reinvestigate a case. Questioning Bhushan about the appropriateness of this, he said that perhaps he should lay down some finality on the matter. Bhushan, in return, referred to several cases where courts had even taken suo moto cognisance of news articles and initiated cases.

Also read: Did the CBI Even Investigate Haren Pandya’s Murder?

Can this PIL be heard in the Supreme Court?

Apart from objecting to the news articles being referred to in court, Justice Mishra also questioned the Bhushans over the procedure they had followed in filing this case.

Early into the hearing, Mishra asked Bhushan why he was bringing a PIL to ask for a complete reinvestigation, when an appeal in the criminal trial was already being heard by him at the Supreme Court.

Prashant Bhushan explained that while the CBI’s appeal of the high court verdict was only concerned with the acquittals, his PIL was asking for a complete reopening of the case. Towards the end of the hearing, he said the court should order the reopening first, before getting to the appeal.

However, Mishra repeatedly quizzed Bhushan on procedure, remarking to himself that the appropriate action would have been for this new evidence (cited by Bhushan) to be made a part of the criminal trial’s appeal and not as a fresh matter.

The Centre’s representative Tushar Mehta commented that the petitioners did not have the locus standi to be asking for this reinvestigation.

To this, Shanti Bhushan replied that in a criminal offence, the act is committed against society and, thus, there was societal interest at large in seeing an honest investigation and prosecution in the case, and that anyone could do this.

SC Reserves Verdict on PIL Seeking Fresh Probe Into Haren Pandya Murder Case

Senior advocate Shanti Bhushan, appearing for NGO CPIL, said that several new facts have emerged recently which required fresh investigation into the murder case.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court Tuesday reserved its verdict on a PIL seeking court-monitored fresh investigation into the murder of then Gujarat home minister Haren Pandya.

A bench headed by Justice Arun Mishra reserved the order after senior advocate Shanti Bhushan, appearing for NGO CPIL, and Solicitor General Tushar Mehta concluded their arguments.

Also read: Explainer: Why There Is a Plea Seeking Re-Investigation of Haren Pandya’s Murder

Bhushan said that several new facts have emerged recently which required fresh investigation into the murder case.

The Solicitor General alleged that the PIL jurisdiction was being abused by the NGO for settling political scores.

Pandya was a minister of state for home in the then Narendra Modi government in Gujarat. He was shot dead on March 26, 2003, in Ahmedabad near Law Garden area of the city during morning walk.

Explainer: Why There Is a Plea Seeking Re-Investigation of Haren Pandya’s Murder

The CBI probe in the case has been controversial for a number of reasons.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court will take up the plea for a fresh investigation into former Gujarat home minister Haren Pandya’s murder on Monday. Pandya, who held portfolios like home and revenue in the state and had also been in the BJP’s national executive, was shot dead in the early morning of March 26, 2003 outside Ahmedabad’s Law Garden.

The high-profile murder was transferred to the Central Bureau of Investigation two days after his death. Since then, however, the Pandya matter has become one of India’s most mysterious cases in recent times.

In light of new accounts of the murder that surfaced in the public domain recently – particularly the testimony of Azam Khan in the Sohrabuddin trial that the Pandya assassination had been ordered by the top Gujarat police officer D.G. Vanzara – the Centre For Public Interest Litigation (CPIL) has moved the Supreme Court with a petition seeking a fresh probe in the case.  

A trial court in June 2007 had convicted 12 of the 15 persons named as accused by the CBI, including Asghar Ali, whom the CBI had said was the actual shooter. In August 2011, however, the Gujarat high court acquitted all of them, citing lack of evidence and a slew of contradictions in the prosecution case  – but not before giving the CBI a dressing down.

Not only did the high court call the CBI investigation – conducted under the supervision of Y.C. Modi, now National Investigative Agency chief – “botched” and “misdirected”, but also had the following stern words to say:

“…What clearly stands out from the record of the present case is that the investigation in the case of murder of Shri Haren Pandya has all throughout been botched up and blinkered and has left a lot to be desired. The investigating officers concerned ought to be held accountable for their inaptitude resulting into injustice, huge harassment of many persons concerned and enormous waste of public resources and public time of the Courts.”

In an interview to The Wire in January 2019, the Y. A. Shaikh, the original investigating officer for the murder, said he too was now convinced the case needed to be reinvestigated.

brief timeline of how the case unfolded – also mentioned in the petition – indicates how controversial the CBI probe has been.

March 28, 2003: The CBI took over the investigation.

April-June 2003: 15 people were arrested and charged with sections of The Prevention of Terrorist Act, 2002.

December 2003: A special court framed charges against the 15 arrested.

November 26, 2005: Sohrabuddin Sheikh, a gangster, was killed in an alleged police encounter along with his wife, Kausar Bi. Later, a high-ranking Gujarat policeman, D.G.Vanzara and current BJP president Amit Shah were named as accused in the case.

Also read: Did the CBI Even Investigate Ex-Gujarat Home Minister Haren Pandya’s Murder?

December 2006: Tulsiram Prajapati, another gangster, was killed allegedly in an encounter with the Gujarat police.  

December 2006: Vithalbhai Pandya, Haren’s father, claimed in an application to the special court that his son’s murder was a political conspiracy and that the CBI sabotaged the probe. He said that Haren’s wife, Jagruti Pandya, was deliberately dropped as a witness, and thus, sought a fresh investigation. The court, however, rejected the application.

March 2007: Vithalbhai moved the special court with same plea but was rejected again.

June 25, 2007: The trial court convicted 12 people for Haren Pandya’s murder.

2008-2009: Various courts dismissed Vithalbhai’s appeals multiple times.

August 29, 2011: Hearing a plea by the convicted, the Gujarat high court overturned the lower court’s decision and acquitted all of them.

February 2012: An appeal by Haren’s wife, Jagruti Pandya, for a reinvestigation was also rejected by the high court.

September 21, 2013: The Times of India reported that Vanzara, who was in prison and undergoing trial for the Sohrabuddin Sheikh fake encounter case, said Pandya’s murder was a political conspiracy. Vanzara’s statements assumed significance as he was considered to be one of the favourite police officials of the Narendra Modi-led Gujarat state government.

2016: Journalist Rana Ayyub’s book Gujarat Files published a recorded conversation between her and Y.A. Shaikh, the first Gujarat police officer who probed the murder before it was handed over to the CBI. In it, Shaikh claims that the CBI did not do a proper investigation and only repeated in its report what the state police had told it.

He is also said to have repeated that the murder was a part of political conspiracy and several politicians and policemen like Vanzara were involved in the BJP leader’s killing.

November 3, 2018: A new account emerged. A, Udaipur-based gangster, Azam Khan – a witness in the Sohrabuddin fake encounter case and himself endangered – told a trial court that Sohrabuddin had told him that Pandya was murdered as a part of contract killing assignment given by Vanzara. Khan was a friend of both Sohrabuddin and Prajapati. He also said that Prajapati along with two others killed Pandya.

In a controversial claim, he also said he had told this to the CBI investigator, N.S. Raju, in 2010 but the official refused to record it.

“I had told the CBI officer that Haren Pandya’s murder was done by Tulsiram Prajapati and one boy at the instance of Sohrabuddin. When I told him (Raju) about Haren Pandya, unhone bola ‘naye bakhede mey mat dalo’ (he said ‘don’t involve me in new confusion’),” Khan told the court.

Khan also said that Prajapati told him in the Udaipur central jail – where both were lodged – that he was tricked into divulging the whereabouts of Sohrabuddin before he was killed, and that Prajapati too feared that he would meet the same fate.  

Also read: We Must Never Compromise Our Fight for Justice: Open Letter to Haren Pandya’s Widow

Khan is currently lodged in an Udaipur prison. He has been seeking protection and unsuccessfully appealing to the courts to allow him to give his full statement again.

In his 2013 resignation letter from jail where he was an undertrial, Vanzara too added to the mystery. He wrote that he and other officers, accused of fake encounters, had only implemented the “conscious policy of this government”, by which he meant the Modi-led state government.

Throughout the investigation, Pandya’s father, sister and wife, and also BJP leaders like Gordhan Zadaphiya, Suresh Patel and Janak Parmar, maintained that the actual killers were still at large.  

The matter blew up as a political controversy also because Pandya was seen as Modi’s rival in the state. He was also one of those from Gujarat who had testified in confidence before the Concerned Citizens’ Tribunal that the Gujarat government was complicit in the 2002 anti-Muslim riots.

The Wire had earlier reported, “He (Pandya) also spoke to Outlook magazine off the record in June and August 2002 about a meeting he said Modi convened on February 27, 2002, in which he alleged the chief minister told the police “to go soft on rioters” and indicated that the Hindus be allow to vent their ire.”

Pandya was killed seven months later, following which Outlook reported:

The former revenue minister implored us not to reveal his identity under any circumstance since he feared the worst. “Don’t disclose my identity even verbally,” he had said. “My name should not be quoted in any story, not even as minister or BJP leader. If you write BJP leader, I will die. If you write minister, even then I will die.”

The CBI has maintained that the former home minister was killed on Muslim fundamentalist cleric Mufti Sufiyan’s orders. The cleric, the CBI claimed, fled to Pakistan the day before 15 people, against whom the CBI pressed charges, were arrested.

However, with the way the high court rebuked the CBI for a poor investigation, and Azam Khan’s subsequent claims, many aspects of the case clearly remain neglected.

Given so many open ends to tie, the CPIL through its secretary, senior advocate Kamini Jaiswal, has now moved the apex court for a fresh probe. 

The matter will be heard before a bench headed by Justice Arun Mishra, the same judge who is hearing the CBI’s appeal against the high court’s 2011 verdict overturning the convictions of the men the agency had charged with the crime.