Chavan's party colleague and former Union Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde, however, said if Chavan was serious about outlawing Sanatan Sanstha he should have called him and asked him about that, instead of merely sending a report to the Centre.
Chavan made the claim against the backdrop of the arrest of Sanatan Sanstha activist Samir Gaikwad in connection with the murder of Communist leader and rationalist Govind Pansare in February this year.
Pansare, 82, and his wife, Uma were shot at by two motorcycle-borne youths on February 16, 2015, near their home in Kolhapur. Pansare died four days later at the Breach Candy Hospital in Mumbai while his wife survived the attack suffering injuries that crippled her.
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He said that some "illegal activities" had come to the notice of the state government then, which felt that Sanatan Sanstha is not a "healthy organisation."
"Along with this particular organisation, there were some others too," Chavan said without divulging the names of those outfits.
"There is a cell in the police that monitors these undesirable organisations. When we think they are exceeding their limits, we request for a ban on such organisations. The Union government, in turn, considers an all India view and based on their parameters, they decide whether to ban or not," he said.