People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIV
No.
09 February 28, 2010 |
A
FIVE member Constitutional Bench of the Supreme Court headed by the
Chief
Justice of India in a judgement last week asserted that the Supreme
Court or a
High Court can suo moto ask the CBI to investigate any case
irrespective
of the permission from the concerned state government. The Supreme
Court said
for the protection of the democratic rights guaranteed by the
Constitution, the
Supreme Court or the High Court can ask the CBI to directly investigate
any
case of national or international importance.
This
verdict of the Supreme Court has generated a serious debate. According
to the
Constitution, law and order is a state subject. Hence will it be proper
for a
High Court or the Supreme Court to, in general, directly order a
central
investigating agency to investigate a case without consulting the
elected state
government? Will such a blanket power not be a serious encroachment on
the
rights of the states?
The
federal structure of our country provides for investigating agencies
both at
the state and central level. Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) is
the
central investigating agency while the Crime Investigation Department
(CID)
works as the special investigating agency of the state governments.
With economic
liberalisation and globalisation, criminal activities have increased
manifold.
The organised international criminal syndicates are engaged in
different forms
of crimes, making use of the advances in the field of information
technology.
The central and state investigating agencies, despite using state of
the art
technologies and striving hard, are finding it very diffcult to expose
the main
criminals and bring them to justice. There are, however, some
occasional
successes too and in this the success rate of CID is higher than that
of CBI.
CBI
ALONE
CAPABLE?
The
logic behind this verdict of the Supreme Court on a sensitive issue of
the
centre-state relations is virtually undermining the state investigating
agencies. The notion that the CBI alone can trace out all the criminal
gangs
and is capable of reaching them to a logical solution is far from
reality.
A
few cases from Tripura can be considered as instances. The CBI was
entrusted
with the 1991 murder case of Shyamhari Sharma, a BJP candidate in an
assembly
bye-election. Even after almost two decades, the case has not yet been
solved.
Not a single criminal could be traced or arrested till date. In the
murder
cases of Congress MLA Bhola Saha and Youth Congress leader Debal Deb too, the CBI
failed to make any headway. In another case of murder of Shukram
Debbarma, the
then SDM of Sadar subdivision, the utter failure of the CBI was seen
when the
case was closed due to lack of progress. The people of Tripura have
lost their
faith in CBI. On the other hand, the CID of the state police has
successfully
investigated and exposed the entire
conspiracy behind the murder of Mantu Das, a leader of the Congress
party, and
most of the criminals have been arrested. There are many more such
instances of
successes of the CID in the state of Tripura as also in other states.
Similar
is the case of burglary of the Nobel prize of Rabindranath Tagore from
Shantiniketan that was handed over to the CBI by the Kolkata High
Court. After
so many years, failing to make any headway in the case, the CBI has
finally
recommended the closure of the case to the judiciary. In Singur, the
CBI
implicated a CPI(M) leader in a politically motivated case. Later, the
investigating officer of that case was caught red-handed while
accepting bribes
and is now behind the bars.
NEUTRALITY
UNDER
CLOUD
The
neutrality of CBI as an investigating agency is not beyond doubt. It
had
appealed to the court to withdraw the case against Ottavio
Quattrocchi, the main accused in the multi-crore Bofors scam. Even
after 22
years, the CBI has failed to make any progress in this particular case.
It may
be recalled the Swedish radio itself broke the news that the AB Bofors
had paid
huge kickbacks to the Indian politicians and their agents to clinch the
deal of
selling Howitzer canons to
Another
point to note is that the IPS cadre police officers are working in both
the CBI
and the state CIDs. All of them belong to the same all
To
maintain the balance of power between the centre and the states, to
safeguard
the rights of the states, and to safeguard the independence and
prestige of the
state-level investigating agencies, the aforesaid verdict of the
Supreme Court
needs to be revisited!