The Jammu and Kashmir government has recommended a CBI probe into the gun license racket after names of public officials, especially some IAS officers from the state, surfaced during investigations carried out by Rajasthan police's Anti-Terror Squad (ATS), officials said Tuesday.
The recommendation was made by the state administration headed by the previous governor N N Vohra last month, the officials said, adding the state's vigilance branch has been asked to carry out the probe on the basis of the findings of Rajasthan's ATS until the CBI takes over the case.
However, the CBI, after perusing the documents handed over to the agency by the state government, sent further queries and was awaiting its response, officials said.
The CBI has asked the state government to furnish some of the relevant documents before it considers filing of a case to probe the issuance of the 4.29 lakh arms licences in the last one decade from various districts of the militancy-hit state, they said.
The unholy nexus between bureaucrats-middlemen-arms dealers was unravelled by the Rajasthan police's ATS last year.
Over 50 people including the brother of an IAS officer have been arrested in the case so far as majority of these arms licences were given to people who do not belong to Jammu and Kashmir on the basis of forged documents, the officials said.
The CBI has also pointed out to the state government about the non-cooperation by its officials to the Rajasthan ATS and indicated some senior bureaucrats may also be questioned, if warranted, during the investigations.
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According to the ATS officials, 1,32,321 of the 1,43,013 gun licences in Jammu region's Doda, Ramban and Udhampur districts were issued to those residing outside the state.
The figure for the entire state is 4,29,301, of which just 10 per cent were issued to the state's residents.
Senior officials in the governor's office said action will be taken against all those guilty of issuing fake licences.
Rajasthan ATS officials said initially they were not aware of the magnitude of the case and its serious ramifications when they began the operation, code named 'Jubaida'.
A sample survey of licences issued from Kupwara, a frontier district in north Kashmir, showed that no files or registers were maintained by the district authorities and many of the arms licences may have been issued to outsiders on the basis of forged documents.
Rajasthan's Director General of Police O P Galhotra has also recommended a CBI probe in the gun-licensing racket and suggested "transfer of the case to the CBI without any further delay"