PLJ 2000
Peshawar
3 (DB)
Present:
MIAN SHAKAR ULLAH JAN
AND
talaat
qayyum qureshi, JJ.
Mst.
MALKA JAN-Petitioner
Versus
I.G. POLICE NWFP PESHAWAR and 2 others-Respondents
W.P. No. 137 of 1997, decided on
19.8.1999.
Criminal Procedure
Code,
1898
(V
of
1898)-
—S. 154-F.I.R.-Registration of--Prayer
for-Offence U/S. 302 Pakistan
Penal Code, 1860~Two version casc--A police
muqabala
case-Filing
a
writ
petition by deceased's mother after one month for registration of
murder case against
police—Petitioner who is mother of deceased has charged various police officers
and attributed specific roles to them for
urder
of her son-Police is not possessed with right to murder or kill or
take life of any
citizen accused of any offence only for reason that such
person was involved
in criminal cases and keeps a previous bad record-
No body even police
can be allowed to take law into bis hands and it is
uty of Courts to Curb high-handedness
sternly-In view of attending
circumstances
of case police is under a statutory duty to reduce into writing information
given to him by petitioner of commission of a
cognizable offence as provided by
Section 154 Cr.P.C.--Version on basis
.I.R. of Police
muqabala
has already been registered is distinct whereas
version given by
petitioner is totally on different premises, that s n of
petitioner lady was
murdered by police officials named in writ petition-
Truth can be
ascertained only if versions of two sides are placed only
before
Court-Petition accepted and police is directed to register a case in accordance
with Section 154 Cr.P.C. on information being given to him
by petitioner of a
cognizable offence.
[Pp.
12 & 13] E, F & G
Criminal Procedure
Code,
1898
(V
of
1898)-
—S. 154 & 190 FIR and Private complainant-In order to set criminal
law
into
motion two modes have been provided in Criminal Procedure Code; one by way of
lodging of report with police under Section 154 Cr.P.C. in
respect of commission
of cognizable offence and other by filing of a
complaint before Magistrate as
provided by Section 190 of Code of
Criminal Procedure.
[P. 6] A
Criminal Procedure
Code,
1898
(V
of
1898)--
—S. 155~Non-cognizable case-So far as
non-cognizable offence is concerned, Section 155 Cr.P.C. provides that
substance of such
information shall be entered in a book to be kept for such purpose and
informant is to be referred to
Magistrate-It is further provided that no
Police
Officer shall investigate in non-cognizable case without order of
Magistrate
having power to try such case-After receiving such order
from Magistrate, Police Officer can investigate
case and may exercise
powers in same
way as in cognizable case.
[P. 7] B
Criminal Procedure
Code, 1898
(V
of 1898)--
—S. 154-F.I.R.~Registration of-Requirement of
law is that Police Officer
has to record FIR mandatorily of a cognizable case under
Section
54
Cr.P.C.
but if it is a non-cognizable case then substance of such
information is to be
entered in relevant register but in each case refusal is
out of question~The
Incharge of a Police Station is duty bound and it is
his statutory
obligation that on receipt of information whether orally or
in
riting he has to record same in book
prescribed for that purpose and
no
option or discretion is left with him in this regard.
[P. 7] C
Criminal Procedure
Code,
1898
(V
of
1898)--
—S. 154--F.I.R. lodging of-Two
versions~Case~If a distinct and separate
cognizable offence is disclosed and no
effective inquiry or trial can be held
without properly appreciating and considering
two versions then another
F.I.R. is to be registered.
[P. 12] D
Mr. Muhammad Aslam Uns,
Advocate for
Petitioner.
Qazi Muhammad Ghazanfar,
AAG for State. Date of hearing: 23.6.1999.
judgment
Talaat Qayyum Qureshi,
J.--6rief facts
given in the writ petition
in hand are that on report of one Waris Khan son of
Muhammad Rafique
who is real brother of Muhammad Muzaffar Khan Inspector of local police,
a
case
under Section 11/16 Offences of
Zina
(Enforcement of Hudood)
Ordinance, 1979 was
registered against Muhammad Akhtar on 8.8.1996
vide
F.I.R. No. 6, in
Police Station Abbottabad alleging therein that Muhammad
Akhtar had abducted
Mst.
Saiqa his niece and daughter of Muhammad
Muzaffar Khan.
Mst.
Saiqa
Bibi, the alleged abductee, being
sui juris
contracted marriage of her own free will
with Muhammad Akhtar on
12.8.1996 and the
spouses started living together with complete harmony in
village Sheikhul Bandi District Abbottabad. This
marriage had been
contracted by
Mst.
Saiqa Bibi independent of
her parents. They were not
consulted prior to solemnization of the said marriage
nor their consent was
obtained thereafter, which nourished grudge against
Muhammad Akhtar.
The father
of Mst.
Saiqa Bibi namely, Muhammad Muzaffar Khan
Inspector
Police
NWFP who was inimical towards Muhammad Akhtar deceased for having abducted his
daughter and solemnized marriage with her without his
consent was in chase
to take revenge from him. He managed to get
Muhammad Akhtar killed, conspired with Head
Constable Iqrar and
Muhammad Arif F.C. who in pre-planned manner after due
deliberation on
14.3.1997 while Muhammad Akhtar deceased was going to offer
Jumma
Prayers and had
hardly reached near Mosque, Muhammad Iqrar Head
Constable opened fire at him which hit
him and as a result of which he died
on the spot Muhammad Arif F.C. was also
firing in the air to keep the
people away. Later on, this incident was given the name
of
"POLICE
MUQABALA*
and a case
vide
F.I.R. No. 307 was
also registered on 14.3.1997
in Police Station Cantt. Abbottabad and in this way it
was endavoured to put
a veil on the police action to save the skin of police
officials and avoid possible
re-action from general public. The matter did not end
there, the police party
after murdering Muhammad Akhtar deceased went to his
house, violated
the privacy and took away the jewellery and other articles from the
house.
2.
The petitioner who is aged mother of deceased
Muhammad
Akhtar as well as both his
wives voiced against high-handedness of
olice,
approached many times to concerned
authorities to register a case against
those
who had killed the deceased but to no avail, hence she sought the help
of local press through which they made the high
ups known of the extra
judicial
killing by the police officials. They also made sympathetic appeal to
the worthy Chief Minister, NWFP of judicial inquiry
into the gruesome
murder of deceased
and also beseeched that the police was after them and
their lives were in eminent danger but no action
was taken by the
authorities which
necessitated in filing the present writ petition seeking the
direction of this Court in the name of SHO, P.S.
Cantt: Abbottabad to
register a case
against the culprits.
3.
Mr. Muhammad Aslam Uns Advocate, the learned
counsel for the
petitioner argued
that fundamental rights as envisaged in Article 25
f the
Constitution,
to be treated in accordance with law or to be entitled to equal
protection
of law, have been violated by respondents. It is the duty of the
Officer In-charge of Police Station to register a
case on receipt of information
that a
cognizable offence has been committed. The S.H.O. P.S. Cantt:
Abbottabad,
Respondent No. 2 failed to discharge his duty in accordance
with law. He further argued that the petitioner not
only approached
Respondent No. 2
many a times to register a case for the murder of her son
but approached Respondent No. 1, the worthy Chief
Minister and other high
ps through the help of press but no action was
taken on her request. After
the
publication of news in all the local Newspapers,
the concerned
authorities were well aware of the incident but they failed to act in
accordance with law. He placed reliance on
"Mst.
Ghanwa Bhutto and
another vs.
Government of Sindh and another"
PLD 1997
Karachi
119 and
"Saleem
Sarwar vs. SHO, P.S. Head Marala and two others"
PLJ 1984 Cr.
Cases (
Lahore
) 369 and prayed that
direction he issued to register a case
against the real culprits.
4.
Qazi Muhammad Ghazanfar A.A.G. firmly resisted the
writ
petition. He argued that the
petitioner had adequate remedy in form of
private complaint available to her which she did not avail. If the
police
authorities did not register a
case on her request she could easily file a
private complaint in the Competent Court of law. He further argued that
fter
the occurrence the petitioner kept mum for about a month and
thereafter raised hue and cry in the press. He
stated that the press clippings
annexed
with the writ petition are not admissible. Neither any report in
writing was submitted to the S.H.O. concerned nor
she ever approached him
for
registration of the case. The deceased Muhammad Akhtar was not a law
abiding citizen but was a proclaimed offender. He
was involved in case FIR
No. 56
registered on 8.8.1996 under Sections 11/16 of Zinc Ordinance, FIR
No. 322 dated 7.8.1994 U/Ss. 11/16/5/10
Zina
Ordinance
in P.S. Havelian
and FIR No. 51 dated
14.2.1995 U/Ss. 452/506/34 PPC, in P.S. Nawanshehr
and his history sheet No. 18/APO has also been
opened. On the day
f
occurrence
he alongwith his co-accused Sohrab proclaimed offender and
Arshad fired at the police party headed by
Muhammad Iqrar of P.S. Cantt; in
village
Sheikhul Bandi. The police party in their defence also opened fire
with
the result Muhammad Akhtar sustained injuries and died on the spot
while his co-accused succeeded in decamping from
the spot. After his death
one rifle
222 bore, two pistols 30 bore, dagger, 7 magazine and 110 cartridges
were
found lying near his dead body and were secured by the police. The
deceased died in an encounter with police and
Muhammad Zaffar Khan
Inspector who
was posted as Traffic Inspector at Mansehra had no concern
with such police encounter. He further argued that
F.I.R. No. 307 has
already been
registered on 14.3.1997 under Section 324/353/224 /34 PPC
and 13 A.O. and second F.I.R. regarding the same
incident cannot be
registered.
5.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties at
length.
6.
In order to set the criminal law into motion two modes
have been
provided
in the Criminal Procedure Code; one by way of lodging of
eport
with the police under Section 154 Cr.P.C. in
respect of commission of
cognizable offence and the other by filing of a complaint
before Magistrate as provided by Section 190 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
7.
Section 154 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
provides that
substance of every
information relating to the commission of a
ognizable
offence if given to an Officer Incharge of a Police Station shall be
entered in a
book to be kept by such
Officer in such form as the Provincial Government
may prescribed in this behalf.
So far as
non-cognizable offence is concerned, Section 155 Cr.P.C. provides that
substance of such information shall be entered in a book to be
kept for such
purpose and informant is to be referred to the Magistrate. It is further
provided that no Police Officer shall investigate in non-cognizable case
without order of the Magistrate having power to try such case. After
receiving such order
from Magistrate, Police Officer can investigate the case
and may exercise
powers in the same way as in cognizable case.
Section 156 Cr.P.C.
empowers the incharge of a Police Station to
investigate cognizable cases whereas
Section 157 Cr.P.C. lays down that on
receiving information with regard to
commission of a cognizable offence
which a Police Officer is competent to
investigate, report is to be sent
immediately to Magistrate empowered in that
behalf and to take necessary
steps for discovery and arrest of offender. If the
Officer Incharge of Police Station under proviso-B to Section 157(1) and
sub-section (2) to Section 157
Cr.P.C. is of the view that there is no sufficient ground
to conduct the
investigation,
he after recording reasons to that effect in the report can
decline to investigate but it is mandatory for
him to notify the information
about
the fact that he would not investigate the case or that the same will
not be investigated. Section 159 Cr.P.C. lays down
that on receipt of such a
report by
Magistrate under Section 157 Cr.P.C.,' he may determine either
not to proceed further or he may take cognizance
of the offence as provided
under
Section 190(l)(b) Cr.P.C. or under Section 203 Cr.P.C. Similarly,
Section 169 Cr.P.C. empowers the Incharge of a
Police Station to release to
the
accused in deficient evidence on his won bond or with or without sureties for
his appearance when-ever he is required. Section 170(1) Cr.P.C. provides
that upon investigation if there is sufficient
evidence the Incharge of Police
Station
would forward the accused to Magistrate. Section 173 Cr.P.C.
envisages that Incharge of Police Station is
required to submit a final report after the completion of investigation
containing the complete result of investigation conducted in the case and
action taken in respect of informant
before
the Magistrate, competent to take cognizance in the case.
8.
The perusal of the above mentioned sections of law
clearly show
that the requirement of law is that Police Officer has to record the FIR
mandatorily of a
cognizable case under Section 154 Cr.P.C. but if it is a non-
cognizable case then
substance of such information is to be entered in the
relevant register but
in each case the refusal is out of question. The Incharge
of a Police Station
is duty bound and it is his statutory obligation that on
receipt of
information whether orally or in writing he has to record the same
in the book
prescribed for that purpose and no option or discretion is left
with him in this
regard.
9.
On receipt of a
complaint the Magistrate, as provided by Section 190 of Code of Criminal
Procedure may take cognizance of an offence. The
Magistrate is empowered to take the
cognizance of the offence under Section
200 Cr.P.C. On filing of complaint in Court, he shall at once
examine the
complainant on oath and the
substance of the examination shall be reduced
to writing. Section 202 Cr.P.C. further empowers such Magistrate to
postpone the issue of process for compelling the
attendance of person
complained
against and to either inquire into the case himself or to direct an
inquiry or investigation to be made by any
Justice of Peace or Police Officer
or
by such other persons as he thinks fit for the purpose for ascertaining the
truth of falsehood of the complaint.
10. No doubt the above mentioned remedies are
parallel and
remedy by way of
private complaint is equally effective practical and
adequate remedy as has been held in the following cases: -
"High Court in exercise of its
jurisdiction under Article 199 of
the Constitution is not obliged to issue
directions for
registration of F.I.R. in each case. Issuance of such a direction,
however, would
depend on the facts and circumstances of each
case as to whether such direction
could be issued to meet the
ends of justice or availability of an alternate remedy
by way of
filing
a direct complaint would be considered as adequate and
prper remedy for
declining such relief."
(2)
"Jamsheed
Ahmed v. Muhammad Akram and another"
1975
SCMR 149.
"The petition could be thrown out on the short ground that the High
Court was under no obligation to grant the relief prayed
for by the
petitioner. It was a matter entirely in its discretion
and there is nothing
to indicate that it was improperly
exercised. Even otherwise, by no means does
the impugned
order shut the door on the petitioner who is at liberty to initiate
criminal proceedings
by lodging a complaint."
(3)
"Haji Muhammad Khan v. Ch, Khizar Hayat and
3 others"
PLD
1997 Lah, 424.
"The principle of law that has been
enunciated in the Intra-
Court Appeal No. 31 of 1976 is, however, unexceptionable.
The
exercise of power under
Article 199 of the Constitution is
subject
to the condition that there is no adequate remedy
provided by law. Such an adequate remedy is
provided to a complainant under Section 190 read with Sections 200 to 203,
Cr.P.C. Section 190 provides that a Magistrate
may take
cognizance upon receiving a
complaint of facts which
constitutes
such offence. The procedure for dealing with such
complaints is provided
in Sections 200 to 203 Cr.P.C. There
may be
cases where the evidence to prove the commission of an
offence cannot be collected except through the
police agency.
Similarly, there may be cases where the entire evidence
to
prove the commission of such offence is
with the complainant.
In the second
category of cases it cannot be doubted that the
complaint before the Magistrate is an adequate remedy. In such
case
the High Court refuses to exercise in writ jurisdiction
under Article 199 of the Constitution. The advisability of
exercising a discretion in favour a petitioner can
be considered only in a case where the evidence can be collected through the
agency of the police."
(4)
"Wazir Ahmad v. SHO, Police Station Maboob
Kaldhoro and
others"
1990 PCr.L.J. 2006.
"The relief under Article 199 of the
Constitution of Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, 1973, being discretionary relief,
the writ
cannot
be issued as of right or in routine. In order to seek a
relief of this
nature, a petitioner must come to Court with clean
hands and if he is
ground to have suppressed a material fact
such relief should be refused."
(5)
"Altaf Hussain
vs.
Government of Sindh
through
Home
Secretary, Government of
Sindh,
Karachi
an another"
PLD 1997
Kar. 600.
"The cases referred to by us in this
judgment, therefore, leave
no doubt that whenever an adequate remedy in the form of
a
private
complaint is available to the petitioner, relief sought by him in the petition
may be declined to him. In the present case,
the petitioner could have filed a
private complaint before the
Court having jurisdiction in the matter in case the
complaint
sent
by him to the police was not registered or he was
dissatisfied with
the investigation of the case, carried out by the
former, apart from
the foreign, when information is received by
a Police Officer Incharge of a police
station regarding the
allegations must be found by him to be
prima facie
correct
before
an F.I.R. is registered. But where allegations are made,
which, without
making an elaborate investigation into them,
are found hard to believe, provisions
of Section 154, Cr.P.C.,
may not be attracted in such case. Therefore, the
question,
whether
discretion must be exercised in favour of a party, in a
even case, and
direction must be given to a Police Officer to
register an F.I.R. would depend upon
the circumstances of each
case. So far as the contention that alternate remedy must
equally be an
effacious remedy is concerned, suffice it to say
that, a private complaint can provide
an equally adequate relief
to the complaint, because he can lead the entire evidence
himself before the
Court. It would, therefore, be erroneous to
assume that grievance of the petitioner
cannot be adequately
redressed by filing of a private complaint. We are,
therefore,
clearly of the view that the directions sought by the petitioner
in the present case
need not be given by us to the respondents."
11.
The only fact that the aggrieved patty has an alternate
remedy
of
filing a private complaint would not take away the discretion of this and
deter the Court from
giving directions to the police to record an F.I.R. in an
appropriate case.
According to the principles laid down by superior Courts
the discretionary
powers must be exercised in good faith having regard to all
relevant
considerations
and it
should be
exercised justly,
fairly and
reasonably.
12.
It was argued by the learned A.A.G. that since F.I.R. No.
307 has
already
been registered on 14.3.1997 under Section 324/353/224/34 PPC
and 13 A.O., second
F.I.R. regarding the same incident cannot be registered.
Before
examining
this
point,
with
the
reference
to
the
facts
and
circumstances of this case it will be proper to discuss and examine some
relevant
case on the subject. In a case
"Akram All Shah vs. SHO, P.S. and
two others"
PLJ 1976 Cr.C.
(Lahore) 53 it was held,
"It cannot be laid down as a proposition of the law that if
one F.I.R.
pertaining to a criminal
occurrence has been registered then another F.I.R. containing the counter
version of the same occurrence cannot
or
not be registered."
13.
Similarly, a Division Bench of Lahore High Court
in case
"Abdul
Ghani
vs. S.H.O. P.S. Saddar"
NLR
1982 Cr. 296
held,-
"I am of the view that in attending
circumstances of the case in hand,
the respondent SHO is under a statutory duty
to reduce into writing
the
information given to him by the petitioner of commission of a
cognizance offence as provided by Section 154
Cr.P.C."
Likewise in a case
"Haleem Sarwar vs. SHO, P.S. Head
Marala and
two others"
PLJ 1984 Cr.C. (Lahore) 369 it was held,
"On a review of the case law reproduced above, and the facts
of the case as emerged from the record, the petitioner has a clear grievance
against the police. If as alleged, the matter was
reported to the police
first in point
of time and the substance of information disclosed
commission of a cognizable offence, then the
S.H.O. could not refuse
to register a formal FIR for it was his duty to
record the information
and proceed to
investigate the matter as provided in Section 154
Cr.P.C. Even if an FIR
has been registered on the basis of one sided
version,
registration of a second FIR showing a different grievance
could not be
refused by the Police Officer in proper performance of
his legal duty under Section 154 Cr.P.C."
Similarly, in an other case titled
"Mrs.
Ghanwa Bhutto and another
vs. Government of Sindh and another"
PLD 1997 Karachi 119 it was
observed,
"Turning now, to the facts of the
present case, there is no
controversy in respect of the fact that two reports in
respect of the
said occurrence have already been registered by the police and in the
second report
registered at the instance of Asghar All, the servant of the first petitioner,
police officers have been charged with murder of
Mir Murtaza Bhutto. No doubt, as has been pointed out by
the
learned counsel for the respondents,
Section 154 of the Criminal
Procedure
Code postulates registration of only one F.I.R. in respect
of an offence and in any case an F.I.R. including
commission of
Qatl-
e-Amd
has already been registered at the instance of
said servant of
the first
petitioner-Even the F.I.R. registered at the instance of
Station House Officer, Haq Nawaz Sial, according
to the
respondents' counsel, was sufficient to se the criminal law into
motion. Therefore, is registration of a third
F.I.R. warranted under
the law? The
circumstances of the present case, however, indicate
that while the first F.I.R. was registered at the
instance of a police
officer who was
suspected of being an accused himself in the case by
the petitioners, the second F.I.R. was registered
at the instance of
Asghar Ali, the
private servant of Petitioner No. 1, after four days of
the occurrence
when he was still in the custody of the police.
Therefore, the contention of the petitioners that the two F.I.Rs.
registered by the police do not reflect the true
facts of the case, does
not appear
to be unreasonable. It is also pertinent to point out that
the petitioners wanted to name certain police
officers as some of the
culprits,
who, according to the petitioners, had participated in the
said crime
and definite role has been attributed to them in the
proposed F.I.R. Therefore, a
prima facie
case appears to have
been
made out against the said person
for the purpose of recording an F.I.R. However, some other police officers have
been named as
suspects but no
definite role has been attributed to them by the petitioner. Therefore, the
petitioners have failed to satisfy the
conscience
of the Court so far as the said police officers are
concerned. We are, therefore, firmly of the view
that circumstances
of the present
case are distinguishable from those of the cases earlier decided by this Court,
reference to which is made in this judgment."
Yet in another case
"Muhammad Anwar
Sub-Inspector, Railway
Police Lahore vs. S.H.O. Railway Police Kasur and 2
others"
PLD 1999
Lahore 50 it was held,
"The crux of the matter which boils
down after doing through all the
cited cases is that if counter-version is
merely restricted to a defence version, the second version or a different
version of incident, second
F.I.R. cannot be recorded. But if a distinct and separate
cognizance
offence is disclosed and no effective inquiry or trial can be held
without properly appreciating and
considering the two versions,
then another
F.I.R. is to be recorded. I am, therefore, of the view
that the respondents have illegally refused to
register the case. The
are,
therefore, directed to register the F.I.R. and thereafter, to
conduct the investigation therein."
Similarly, in case titled
"Jamshed
Khan and another vs. Government
ofSindh and others"
1999 P.O.L.J. 512 it
was held,
"Thus, it is obvious that looking
towards the facts and circumstances
of a particular case not only second but
even third F.I.R. could be
registered."
14.
The above discussion would lead us to the conclusion
that "if a
distinct and separate cognizable offence is disclosed and no effective
nquiry
or trial can be held without properly
appreciating and considering the two
versions then another F.I.R. is to be
registered.
15.
In the case in hand the police officials declared the
occurrence as
police
encounter and registered F.I.R. No. 307 on 14.3.1997
hereas the
etitioner who is mother of the
deceased has charged various police officers and attributed specific roles to
them for murder of her son. The Constitution of Pakistan safe guards a against
breach of his fundamental rights, they also
stand controlled and
governed by the provisions of law against breach of
their rights and are also safe guarded against certain wrongs. The
police is
not possessed with right
to murder or kill or take life of any citizen accused
of any offence only for the reason that such
person was involved in criminal cases and keeps a previous bad record. A person
keeping bad record may be
innocent in
the case registered against him because under the law
presumption of innocence will continue until he is
proved guilty. If the police
machinery
takes law in their hands they are to be dealt with in the same
manner as the ordinary citizen are dealt with.
Nobody can be allowed to take
law into
his hands and it is the duty of the Courts to curb the high
handedness sternly.
16.
aving given consideration to the controversy
involved, we are
of the view that in the attending circumstances of the case in hand, the
Respondent
No. 2, S.H.O. P.S. Cantfc Abbottabad is under a statutory duty
to reduce into
writing the information given to him by the petitioner
f the
commission of a cognizable offence as
provided by Section 154 Cr.P.C.
Needless to mention that if in the course of
investigation he comes to
conclusion
that information given by the petitioner is false he can have a recourse to the
law. The version on the basis of which F.I.R. No. 307 has
already been registered on 14.3.1997 is distinct
whereas the version given by
the
petitioner is totally on different premises that her son, the deceased, was
murdered by Police Officials named in the writ
petition. At this stage we
cannot
hold as to which version is correct but truth can be ascertained only if
the case of the petitioner is registered and both
the cases are investigated
upon
together and thereafter report or reports are submitted by the
Investigating Agency. Unless both the versions
are placed before the Court
no
proper adjudication of the respective contentions could be made to submit
challan in one case and to ignore the version
given in any other is not at all
conducive
to the interest of justice.
17. In view of the
above discussion this writ petition is accepted.
Respondent No. 2 S.H.O. P.S. Cantt:
Abbottabad is directed to register a case
in accordance with Section 154 Cr.P.C. on the
information being given to
him by the petitioner of a cognizable offence and the
investigation of the case
be entrusted to an experienced, and honest police
official. The petitioner is
directed to approach the Respondent No. 2 for
registration of the case.
(K.K.F.)
Orders
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