Former Home minister P Chidambaram on Tuesday said it was "incomprehensible" why certain files in the Ishrat Jahan encounter case were missing and asserted that there was nothing morally, politically or ethically wrong in the 'second' affidavit, which stated there was no conclusive evidence to prove that she was a terrorist.
"It is simply incomprehensible why some papers in the files are missing. Which are the papers that are missing? The letters written by the Home Secretary to the Attorney General, the draft affidavit sent to the AG, the vetted affidavit the AG sent to the home ministry and the final affidavit sent to the AG," Chidambaram said here.
"The papers are missing. Who gains by losing these papers? It is only those who make accusations gain. These papers will completely vindicate what I have been saying. I want to place the entire file in the public domain, including the missing papers," the Congress leader said.
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Chidambaram also recalled that the affidavit was filed after Ahmedabad Metropolitan Judge S P Tamang's report, which in September 2009, declared the encounter fake.
"Now, the second affidavit is not really a second affidavit...It is a supplementary affidavit. Any lawyer would know that a further affidavit is a supplementary affidavit that is vetted by the highest law officer of the country," he added.
Chidambaram, who filed nomination for the Rajya Sabha from Maharashtra, said the second affidavit only has five to six paragraphs and it does not withdraw the first affidavit.
"The second paragraph says why the further affidavit is being filed. The further affidavit was filed after Judge Tamang's report, which indicted the police and said it was a fake encounter and the persons killed were in custody for at least more than two to three days," he said.
"They were killed at midnight while they were sitting in a car and Rs 2.06 lakh were planted on their bodies. All this is finding of a judge in the Maharashtra judiciary," Chidambaram said.
He added that the fifth paragraph of the further affidavit states that the Government of India shares intelligence inputs regularly with state governments and the first affidavit disclosed what those intelligence inputs were.
"I wish to clarify that the intelligence inputs are only intelligence inputs and not conclusive evidence and you cannot come to any conclusion on the basis of intelligence inputs. It must be investigated and prosecuted in a court of law. Now please tell me which part of that affidavit is wrong either legally, morally or politically," he asked.