Laloo says the death is a clear case of suicide
Sanjay Khandelwal, Harish's younger brother, says
the deceased had been helping the CBI in the investigation and had accepted
the fact he could be jailed for his wrongdoings. So, his
sudden decision to commit suicide was quite unbelievable. After
all, Khandelwal himself had sought time till May 8 from the CBI
to furnish more details and submit relevant documents.
Two notices served by the Dhanbad CBI were found
in the deceased's pocket. But it was the discovery of two
identical suicide notes, soaked in blood, that made the Bureau sit
up and take note. Written in Hindi, the notes accused Dhanbad
CBI inspector M N P Sinha of "mental and physical torture."
A third copy of the same note was discovered when
the police searched Hotel Kunal at Hirapur, where Khandelwal was
living with three others. The police say Khandelwal wrote the three notes at the hotel itself, before leaving for the CBI interrogation.
But this version seems to have loopholes aplenty.
For instance, how could Khandelwal write a note accusing the
CBI of 'torturing' him even before the interrogation?
Also, CBI sources insist Khandelwal had never met M N P
Sinha, the 'torturer'.
Then, despite the recovery of the CBI notices and the two suicide notes, why could the police not disclose the identity of the dead man for nearly 48 hours? Quite
inexplicably, the body was not photographed, and no medical board
was constituted.
Some other basic questions remain unanswered as well.
When visiting the CBI office at Dhanbad, Khandelwal was said to
be wearing brown leather shoes and, according to his three hotel
mates, he did not return after that. So, how was Khandelwal's
body recovered with 'a pair of white leather slippers' ?
Also, according to brother Sanjay, Harish could not
move without his 'thick, high-powered spectacles', but
no spectacles were found near the body.
While the GRP claims Khandelwal was run over
by the Jammu-Tawi Express on May 6 and discovered next morning
by gangman Mahato, the residents of Binodnagar, bordering the
Baramasia-Dhokhra halt, have a different story to tell. The Jammu-Tawi Express crosses the point at around 5.45 pm, but locals insist that ''a man was run over by the Asansol-Dhanbad
passenger train at around 4 pm on May 6."
Baramasia
crossing gateman Ram Chandra Roy say he was informed of the "accident" at around 6 pm, just after the Jammu-Tawi
Express had passed. Roy also claims he did not inform the
east cabin as he had not seen the body himself. But the locals
allege the gateman informed the cabin that evening itself.
They go on to state that the corpse could not have remained
undetected for over 12 hours in as congested an area as the Baramasia
crossing.
Ram Chandra Roy, meanwhile, is "on leave" from
May 8.
Some of the railway staff have raised questions about
the amount of blood on Khandelwal's body -- normally, when a
train runs over someone, very little blood flows. "If the
head was severed and landed in a nearby bush, how come the trousers
and the suicide notes were soaked in blood?" they ask.
At a time when all attention was focused on this 'suicide', Ram Raj Singh, a doctor in the AHD, was
killed in a road accident. Dr Singh and his 18-year-old daughter,
Pratima, died when a speeding truck rammed into the cycle-rickshaw
in which they were travelling, at Chirayantand overbridge, in
Patna, on May 15 morning. Strangely, both the truck and
the rickshaw-puller are yet to be traced. While Singh did not
figure in the list of accused, it is yet to be ascertained whether
he had been questioned by the CBI.
For the moment, the CBI is taking a long hard look
at the Khandelwal case as it clearly suspects foul play.
But the Bihar chief minister says the death is a clear case of suicide and has handed it over
to the CID for "routine attention."
Meanwhile, on May 19, the Patna
high court division bench, which monitors the probe into the fodder scam, directed
Patna CBI Deputy Inspector General R N Kaul to submit a report on the Khandelwal case within two weeks.
The CBI obviously hopes to establish that a terror
network is operating to stymie investigations into the scam which
finds the biggest names in Bihar politics in the firing line.
Naved Zahir in Patna
Kind courtesy: Sunday magazine
|