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Punjab police tortured Pathankot witness, ignored vital leads

"I was repeatedly assaulted even as I kept insisting that whatever I had told them was true," said Madan Gopal, one of the three abducted by gunmen.

Pathankot attack
Source: NDTV

With the gunbattle between security forces and gunmen at Pathankot Air Foce station still on, it has now emerged that the Punjab police, despite having been informed about the gunmen, ignored the leads and rather tortured the witness who himself is a police employee.

Madan Gopal, a cook, SP Pathankot Salvinder Singh and Singh's friend-Rajesh Verma were abducted by the gunmen on Thursday late night, who stormed the Pathankot air base on Saturday morning. On Friday early morning, at around 2 a.m., Mr. Gopal and Mr. Singh were freed.

Madan Gopal told The Hindu on Sunday that not only was the vital information he shared with the police immediately after he was freed ignored but also he was brutally tortured by the Punjab Police.

Mr. Gopal told the newspaper that while returning to Pathnkot, they were signalled to stop by five men dressed in Army fatigues and carrying assault rifles. They already had another vehicle which they had obtained after murdering a taxi driver.

It was nearly midnight and they were on a isolated stretch when the uniformed men stopped them.

"Mr. Verma was driving the SUV with Mr. Singh sitting next to him while I was in the middle passenger seat. In a flash, we were overpowered with Mr. Verma being the first one to be forcefully evicted and stuffed inside the boot," said Mr. Gopal.

"They dragged Mr. Singh out of the car and sandwiched him between the front and middle seats, something they did to me as well. Two of them sat on us after tying up our limbs, taping our eyes and gagging our mouths," he added.

Two of the attackers then sat over the duo. Mr. Gopal recalled the attackers talking to each other but is fairly certain that the language used by most of them "wasn't Punjabi".

"Only one of them uttered few words in broken Punjabi, which is why I could not comprehend much. The other familiar words I heard were Asalam Alaikum. From the voices, I could sense they were young men," said Mr. Gopal.

Neither Mr. Gopal nor Mr. Singh (in his purported disclosure to the police) could remember the routes they were driven on in the hijacked car but it was a dense forest close to the base where they were eventually dumped. The assailants drove away with Mr. Verma still inside the boot.

"The darkness, dense bushes and tall grasses made it extremely difficult for us to navigate out of the forest. When we eventually did, after walking for two hours and even encountering a canal, we were in a village," said Mr. Gopal.

Villagers helped Mr. Singh to contact his seniors. "He called up Gurdaspur SSP Gurpreet Singh and told him that those who had kidnapped us could be militants," recounted Mr. Gopal.

He added that his hope of police rushing him to safety was immediately dashed when they were taken to the Sadar police station in Pathankot.

"I was repeatedly assaulted even as I kept insisting that whatever I had told them was true. My fears were proved right when the base was attacked but the local police as well as some intelligence officers kept torturing me even after the gun battle started. This is all I get after serving this force for 40 years," said Mr. Gopal, a Class IV staff of Punjab Police, who got an extension after retiring last year.

Read the article at The Hindu


4 min read

Published

Updated

By Shamsher Kainth

Source: The Hindu


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