India / Notice to Union Minister to record statement over Rajasthan audio tapes

The Special Operations Group (SOG) of Rajasthan Police has served a notice to BJP leader and Union Minister for Jal Shakti Gajendra Singh Shekhawat over audio tapes which surfaced amid Rajasthan political crisis. He has been served the notice for his alleged bid to destabilise the Congress government in Rajasthan and has been directed to record his statement.

Hindustan Times : Jul 20, 2020, 01:35 PM
Jaipur: The special operations group (SOG) of Rajasthan Police has served a notice to Union Minister for Jal Shakti Gajendra Singh Shekhawat for his alleged bid to destabilise the Ashok Gehlot-led government and directed him to record his statement, an official said.

“A notice has been served to the minister through his personal secretary,” said Ashok Rathore, additional director-general of police (ADP), SOG, Rajasthan.

Last Friday, the SOG had registered two separate first information reports (FIRs) after Congress chief whip in the Rajasthan assembly Mahesh Joshi had lodged a complaint about three audiotapes that had surfaced the previous evening and quickly went viral on social media.

The leaked audiotapes purportedly contained elaborate conversations between a rebel Congress lawmaker and others, including one Gajendra Singh, who could be heard discussing strategies to topple the Ashok Gehlot-led government in Rajasthan.

The FIRs had identified the rebel Congress legislator from Sardarshahar, Bhanwar Lal Sharma, who has since been suspended by the party, and Sanjay Jain, a networker and known for his proximity to politicians cutting across party lines and also the bureaucracy.

Jain was arrested by the SOG on Friday night and is being interrogated.

The persons named in the FIR have been booked under Sections 120B (criminal conspiracy) and 124A (sedition) of the Indian Penal Code, Rathore said.

Minister Shekhawat and dissident lawmaker Sharma had issued separate statements and denied the charges levelled against them and termed the audiotapes as “fake” and blamed chief minister Gehlot for the trump-up charges.

“The voice on the audiotapes is not mine. I am ready to face any investigation,” Shekhawat had said last week.