MAHARASHTRA
Arms for a SongThe well-connected buy confiscated firearms dirt cheap.
By Sheela
Raval
PSSST ... Want a .32 bore
revolver? Going cheap. Dirt cheap. Or a 12 bore rifle at half the price of an airgun? This
is no clandestine deal between gun-runners and criminals. The buyers are highly placed
people and the seller is none other than the Maharashtra Government. Surprised? Don't be.
The state Government has been happily selling firearms at throwaway prices to its
ministers, their relatives and other well-connected people.
A .32 bore revolver costs up to Rs 1.25 lakh in the open
market. But Rahul Mahajan, son of BJP strongman Pramod Mahajan, got one ridiculously cheap
for Rs 8,816. Kiran Patil Dongaokar, son of independent MLA Ashok Patil Dongaokar was
luckier: he got one for Rs 2,500, though Maharashtra Assembly Speaker Datta Nalavade of
the Shiv Sena had to shell out Rs 4,500.
The largesse transcends political boundaries. Former minister
Javed Khan of the Congress bought a 12 bore Russian-made rifle for Rs 700. Former chief
minister Sudhakarrao Naik of the Congress got one for Rs 1,150. The ministers and their
kin are not the only ones to have made a killing. Deputy Chief Minister and Home Minister
Gopinath Munde's Private Secretary Annasaheb Misal bought a .32 bore revolver for Rs
9,683.
The Bombay High Court has now pulled down the shutters on
this mega discount sale in response to a public-interest petition by Amarsinh Jyotirao
Jadhavrao, a Pune-based freedom fighter and editor of Dainik Rashtratej. Jadhavrao, who
forked out Rs 1 lakh for a second-hand revolver in February, wants the Government to
recover the difference in the sale price from the politicians, their relatives and their
minions.
In its defence, the Government says it is merely following
rules set by the Central Government. A September 1993 circular gives blanket powers to the
home ministers of all states and Union territories to sell confiscated arms. The circular
reserves the lion's share of the firearms for ministers, MPs, MLAs, councillors, senior
officials and retired personnel. Only 10 per cent are kept for citizens facing a grave
threat to their lives.
Jadhavrao's petition questions the constitutional validity of
the circular and the uncontrolled power of the state Home Ministry while disposing of
confiscated arms. Certainly, with a mere 10 per cent reserved for the common citizen, the
circular is loaded in favour of the ruling elite and the well connected. Defending the
sale, Munde says, "There is nothing wrong in giving these arms to ministers as there
is a special quota for them."
Former police commissioner Julio Ribeiro begs to differ. He
says ministers already enjoying police protection don't need firearms -- and certainly not
at such throwaway prices. Cultural Affairs Minister Pramod Navalkar -- who bought a .32
bore revolver for Rs 5,000 -- finds nothing amiss in the discounted pricing. "All the
firearms are second-hand and some of them are even damaged."
Jadhavrao also claims in his petition that most of the people
who have been allotted these firearms use them for purposes other than personal
protection. A senior official says that some ministers have even gifted the firearms to
friends and associates. The spurt in Mumbai's crime rate perhaps bears testimony to this
charge. |