Tag: MVA

  • A nexus that left the police red-faced

    A nexus that left the police red-faced

    Ex-minister Deshmukh must explain why he did not object to the reinstatement of a tainted cop

    By Julio Ribeiro

    I was surprised to receive a book written by Maharashtra’s former Home Minister Anil Deshmukh. I had heard tales of how transfers of police personnel at all levels were effected through political pressure during his tenure. He faced stiff competition from an IPS officer (now retired), Param Bir Singh. The good name of the Mumbai city police came under threat while they were in office.

    The Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) — comprising the Uddhav Thackeray-led Shiv Sena, the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP-Sharad Pawar) and the Congress — ruled Maharashtra from November 2019 to June 2022. The ruling alliance chose a wrong man as the Commissioner of Police (CP), Mumbai. Simultaneously, Pawar picked Deshmukh as the minister supervising the working of the police force. It was a deadly combination that was bound to cause an explosion sooner than later. And it did.

    On February 25, 2021, a Scorpio car, laden with 20 gelatin sticks — but mercifully without a detonator — was found parked near Mukesh Ambani’s residence (Antilia) on Altamount Road, an upmarket residential area of the city. The car was traced to Mansukh Hiren, a friend of then CP Param Bir’s ‘blue-eyed boy’ Sachin Vaze, who was an assistant police inspector (API) in the Crime Branch. It was established by the Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) of the state police and the National Investigation Agency (NIA) that Vaze had been seen in that Scorpio on earlier occasions.

    Another car, an Innova, belonging to the Crime Branch, was specially allotted to Vaze. That was also seen in the vicinity of the Ambani house at the same time. It was apparent that the Crime Branch’s intelligence unit, headed by Vaze, was involved in the planting of the Scorpio outside Ambani’s home for reasons that remain undisclosed to this date.

    Vaze had been suspended as he was facing a murder charge. His visiting cards projected him as an ‘encounter specialist’; his associates in the private security business used to distribute these cards among potential customers. Vaze had served under inspector Pradeep Sharma, the doyen of ‘encounter specialists’, in the early years of his service in the police. Sharma and Vaze were in touch with each other and also with the IPS officer who has been targeted by Deshmukh in his book, Diary of a Home Minister.

    The officer had been the CP of the neighboring city of Thane. His image in the eyes of Thane’s residents left much to be desired. His image in the eyes of his own men, whom he was chosen to lead, was even worse.

    This officer had tried desperately for the Mumbai police chief’s post when his tenure as the Thane CP ended. Two excellent officers, DD Padsalgikar and SK Jaiswal, were sent back from Central deputation. The BJP-led Central Government had correctly assessed the risk of installing a wrong man as the chief of the Mumbai Police.

    When the MVA government was sworn in and the Home portfolio was allotted to the NCP, Mumbai residents were saddled with a choice that puzzled them. How did the appointee avoid the eagle eye of Pawar? The officer himself let it be known that Pawar had interviewed him and advised him to not let down a much-respected force and sully its good name.

    Deshmukh’s account of his post-Antilia relations with the CP is a defense of himself in the case registered against him by the CBI and then the NIA on the allegations made by his friend-turned-foe after the latter was removed from the top post. The minister was accused by the CP of summoning Vaze and demanding Rs 100 crore a month as his share of the illegal collections that Vaze was reportedly making from bar owners and others.

    The former Home Minister does not explain in his book why and how the CP was chosen. He must answer that question because the decline in the police’s performance began from there. Further, he does not explain why he, as Home Minister, did not object to the reinstatement of Vaze in service despite the latter facing a murder charge. He also does not explain how a hands-on minister like him did not advise the CP to follow protocol procedures and ensure that Vaze reported to senior officers in the Crime Branch and not to the CP directly. The intelligence unit is supposed to be headed by a senior inspector. How was an API made the head of that important unit? Why did the CP summon the ACP in charge of the social services (SS) unit and tell him to involve Vaze in his work? The SS unit of the Crime Branch deals with the city’s brothels!

    The discovery of explosives in a car near Ambani’s house was itself an indicator that things were going wrong for the city police. No API, even a swashbuckler like Vaze, could have dared to carry out such a project without the CP’s knowledge. If the latter insists that he knew nothing of the plan, that admission alone would disqualify him from holding high office.

    The subsequent murder of Hiren conclusively showed that the menace of encounter specialists should be buried once and for all. That burial had been effected by Anami Roy, who was the CP two decades ago. City residents were breathing easier till Vaze was inducted into the Crime Branch and given powers that were well beyond his rank. Did the minister not know about the rumblings in the police because Vaze operated as the CP’s alter ego?

    The almost unanimous opinion in Mumbai’s police force was that the Home Minister and the CP were in league. After the Scorpio fiasco, the latter got off the hook by teaming up with the BJP, then in the Opposition.

    The image of Mumbai’s city police suffered considerably from the games that politicians played. And this is what should alarm the city’s residents. Deshmukh’s defense of the part he played in the episode, as reflected in his book, is as he intended it to be — his defense. The facts against the ex-CP that he has disclosed need to be tested also, but in a court of law.

    (Julio Ribeiro is a Former Ambassador & DGP, Punjab)

  • Maharashtra crisis: MVA end nears, Uddhav loses control

    Maharashtra crisis: MVA end nears, Uddhav loses control

    New Delhi (TIP)- Maharashtra saw a third straight day of hectic political developments as the Shiv Sena seems to be leaning towards a blow hot, blow cold approach with a majority of its MLAs now in Assam’s Guwahati sequestered in a hotel with rebel state minister Eknath Shinde, whose coup unfolded earlier this week. On Thursday, June 23, a letter by a rebel MLA, Sanjay Shirsat, was tweeted by Shinde on Twitter in a bid to spill the beans about Sena’s alleged treatment of its legislators. Later, however, a letter to deputy speaker – seeking disqualification of the dissidents – prompted a strong pushback from the Maharashtra minister, who is now said to have passed the magic number of 37 to chase the goal of splitting the party without attracting an anti-defection law. According to reports, Three more Shiv Sena MLAs are set to join Eknath Shinde’s rebel camp. With this, the ‘rebel Sena’ number has risen to 49 with 40 Shiv Sena MLAs and 9 independent MLAs.

    Eknath Shinde has now reportedly written to the deputy speaker of the assembly, Narhari Zirwal, seeking the reaffirmation of his appointment as the leader of the Shiv Sena Legislature Party. He has sought the appointment of Bharatshet Gogawale as the chief whip. This comes after the Shiv Sena sought disqualification of 12 rebel MLAs – Eknath Shinde, Prakash Surve, Tanaji Sawant, Mahesh Shinde, Abdul Sattar, Sandeep Bhumare, Bharat Gogawale, Sanjay Shirsat, Yamini Yadhav, Anil Babar, Balaji Devdas, Lata Chaudhari – as many legislators missed a key meet amid the crisis. Only 13 MLAs were said to be present at a meeting held by chief minister Uddhav Thackeray.

    However, Shinde, 58, shot back in a series of tweets. “Who are you trying to scare? We understand your made-up law too! According to the 10th Schedule to the Constitution, the whip is applicable for Assembly proceedings, not for meetings. There are numerous Supreme Court decisions in this regard.” You can’t scare us by applying for action against 12 MLAs. We are the real Shiv Sena and Shiv Sainik of the venerable Shiv Sena chief Balasaheb Thackeray,” he said.

    “We demand action against you for creating an illegal group without the numbers,” he wrote.

    Meanwhile, the Shiv Sena seems to be leaning towards a blow hot, blow cold approach. While a disqualification has been sought for the rebels, Sena spokesperson and MP Sanjay Raut had given a 24-hour deadline to the legislators, apparently giving a call-to-action for “real Shiv Sainiks”. The party even said that will rethink the alliance, which has been called “unnatural” by Shinde. “You say you are real Shiv Sainiks and will not quit the party. We are ready to consider your demand provided you come back to Mumbai within 24 hours and discuss the issue with CM Uddhav Thackeray. Your demand will be considered positively. Don’t write letters on Twitter and WhatsApp,” Raut said during a press briefing, referring to Sanjay Shirsat’s letter. In his letter, Sanjay Shirsat had claimed that the party MLAs were not allowed to meet Uddhav Thackeray, blaming the chief minister’s ‘inner circle’. He also questioned why they were not allowed to go to Ayodhya with minister Aaditya Thackeray. Meanwhile, Sena’s coalition partners – the NCP and the Congress – have been publicly backing the party amid the crisis.

    “The fate of the MVA government will be decided in the Assembly, not in Guwahati (where the rebels are camping). The MVA will prove its majority on the floor of the House,” Sharad Pawar said on Thursday.

    “We (the Congress) formed the MVA with the Shiv Sena and the NCP to stop the BJP (from coming to power). Our support to the MVA continues,” Congress’s Ashok Chavan told reporters.