
Don’t spread false news and tarnish our name: T.N. police to Annamalai
The Hindu
Annamalai has been continuously indulging in defamatory campaign against the Tamil Nadu Police, says a statement released by the State police headquarters
The Police Department and Tamil Nadu BJP chief K. Annamalai on Saturday issued statements against each other’s allegations in connection with the recent car blast in Coimbatore.
The statement released by the State police headquarters said Mr. Annamalai had been continuously indulging in a defamatory campaign against the Tamil Nadu Police. Even as the probe in the case was on, and before analysing the kind of explosion and the materials that were stored in the car, Mr. Annamalai had expressed several views and tried to divert the investigation. He claimed that there was a delay in transferring the case to the National Investigation Agency (NIA), it said.
The statement said: “It is the local police that register a case and take up the investigation when such incidents occur. When provisions of Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act are included during investigation or if the case is registered under provisions of the National Investigation Agency Act, 2008, under section 6 of the Act, on receipt of information and recording, the officer-in-charge of the police station shall forward the report to the State Government forthwith. On receipt of the report, the State government shall forward the report to the Central Government, and the Central Government shall determine, on the basis of information made available by the State government, within fifteen days from the date of receipt of the report whether it is a fit case to be investigated by the Agency.”
The release further explained: “That is the law. In practice, it will take a few months to issue an order for the NIA investigation. Until then, the officer who registered the case will investigate. In the Coimbatore cylinder explosion case, such legal procedure was adopted and without any delay, the State government sent the report to the Union government and the case was transferred to NIA...; in some cases, the Union government shall issue orders suo motu for investigation by the NIA. However, the Chief Minister has recommended an NIA probe even before the Union government did. Where was the delay? In some cases, relating to such occurrences, it was handed over to the NIA after a delay of several months and case files were handed over many months later.”
The statement claimed that Mr. Annamalai’s statement that the Union Home Ministry had issued a warning beforehand stating that an incident would occur in Coimbatore was false.
That was a general advisory to all States and Union Territories and there was no reference to Coimbatore anywhere.