Close X
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
ADVT 
India

Modi Government Sets Up Special Investigation Team To Probe 1984 Riots

Darpan News Desk IANS, 12 Feb, 2015 03:05 PM
    The government Thursday set up a Special Investigation Team for fresh investigation into serious criminal cases relating to 1984 anti-Sikh riots, it was announced here.
     
    In a series of tweets, the official Press Information Bureau said that the committee will be headed by IPS officer Pramod Ashthana and will submit its report in six months.
     
    "Govt. constituted Special Investigation Team for investigating/re-investigating the cases of 1984 riots."
     
    "SIT will re-investigate the appropriately serious criminal cases files in Delhi in connection with 1984 riots and have since been closed," the PIB tweeted.
     
    It said the SIT will file a charge sheet against the accused in the proper court where after investigation, sufficient evidence is found available.
     
    "SIT shall examine also the files of Justice J.D. Jain and Shri D.K. Agarwal Committee for a thorough investigation of criminal cases," the PIB said.
     
    It said that while Ashthana will head the SIT, Rakesh Kapoor and Kumar Gyanesh will be its members.
     
    The SIT has been constituted following a recommendation by Justice (retd) G.P. Mathur panel.
     
    The panel, in its report submitted to the home ministry last month, had favoured reinvestigation in cases where crucial evidence may have been overlooked.
     
    The riots followed assassination of the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and over 2,700 people are estimated to have been killed in Delhi. There was violence in other parts of the country also.
     
    The Bharatiya Janata Party and its ally Shiromani Akali Dal have demanded re-investigation into anti-Sikh riot cases.
     
    The 49-day Arvind Kejriwal government in Delhi had also announced a SIT to reopen and investigate cases which were closed by police and were never sent for trial to the court.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Everything You Wanted to Know About Narendra Modi's Historic Win

    Everything You Wanted to Know About Narendra Modi's Historic Win
    In a historic election that would could have far-reaching implications for India's polity and its policies, Narendra Modi, a rank outsider to Delhi's politics, was poised to become the 14th prime minister of this diverse nation of 1.2 billion people

    Everything You Wanted to Know About Narendra Modi's Historic Win

    BJP takes big lead in Indian vote count

    BJP takes big lead in Indian vote count
    The BJP took a big lead as millions of votes polled in the Lok Sabha election were counted Friday, with its candidates racing ahead of all others in 71 of the 122 seats.

    BJP takes big lead in Indian vote count

    Modi will be strong leader but will face problems: Astrologers

    Modi will be strong leader but will face problems: Astrologers
    BJP leader Narendra Modi is sure to head India's new government but he could face problems even while providing strong governance for the next five years, astrologers say.

    Modi will be strong leader but will face problems: Astrologers

    Kashmir furiously debates Modi's rise and rise

    Kashmir furiously debates Modi's rise and rise
    BJP leader Narendra Modi's probable rise to the top job in India invokes both hope and uncertainty among people in Jammu and Kashmir.

    Kashmir furiously debates Modi's rise and rise

    Manmohan Singh's legacy: A mixed bag for history to judge

    Manmohan Singh's legacy: A mixed bag for history to judge
    History will be kinder to me, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh stated at his final press conference earlier this year. As he ends his decade-long tenure as head of two successive UPA governments, his stock as a middle class hero stood severely diminished due to a floundering economy, shrinking opportunities and the acts of omission and commission of colleagues in the government and party.

    Manmohan Singh's legacy: A mixed bag for history to judge

    Ambani's Antilia rated world's 'most outrageously expensive property'

    Ambani's Antilia rated world's 'most outrageously expensive property'
    Reliance Industries Chairman Mukesh Ambani's skyscraper Mumbai home Antilia - named after a mythical island in the Atlantic - has been rated as the world's "most outrageously expensive property" by Forbes magazine.

    Ambani's Antilia rated world's 'most outrageously expensive property'