By Pranab Mondal in Barrackpore
Published 4.04.18
Barrackpore: A retired army officer who has spent more than four years in jail after being branded a spy and charged with waging war against the state, returned home a free man on Monday night.
Madan Mohan Pal at his house in Barrackpore on Tuesday, Picture by Bishwarup Dutta. |
A Barrackpore court cleared Madan Mohan Pal of all charges earlier in the day. The police had booked Pal under several IPC sections, including 121 (waging or attempting to wage war, or abetting the waging of war against the state), 121A (conspiring to commit certain offences against the state) and 132 (abetment of mutiny if mutiny is committed in consequence thereof). Had he been found guilty under sections 121 and 132, Pal might have been awarded death sentence or imprisoned for life.
Pal recalled to Metro his life in the armed forces and inside jail sitting on the verandah of his two-storey house in Barrackpore, from where he had been rounded up on December 12, 2013. "Look at my hand. It is the hand that saluted then President K.R. Narayanan in a Republic Day party at Rashtrapati Bhavan and governor Tribhuvana Narayana Singh at the Brigade Parade Ground. The police handcuffed the same hands. I served in the Indian Army for 26 years and retired as junior commissioned officer in 2008. After all these they accused me of waging war against the state," said Pal, a day after his release from Dum Dum Central jail.
"I was sitting on the veranda and talking to a tax consultant on December 12, 2013. The gate was open. A group of policemen entered my house, rummaged through almirahs... and asked me to accompany them. They took away my elder daughter's computer. She was pursuing BTech and all her study materials were stored in the computer. I begged to the policemen to return the computer as her exams were approaching. But they paid no heed to my pleas," Pal said. Pal said he had no clue from where the police learnt that he had passed on sensitive information to an ISI agent.
Recounting his experience in jail, Pal said he had been sold "as a slave" to another inmate for Rs 275. "It's a standard practice in the jail. A powerful inmate takes hold of new inmates and sells them to others. I was tortured and forced to do all odd jobs. I could bear it because of my army training," he said. Pal's wife, who wished not to be named, narrated the ordeal she had to face since her husband's arrest. "They stopped my husband's pension. Our daughters started giving tuition to support the family. People would insult them whenever they stepped out," she said. "I used to meet my husband in jail once a week. The visitors' room used to be packed with relatives and family members of inmates. There were 10 small windows with iron mesh and 20 inmates used to be on the other side. I had to struggle to reach close to the window to see his face. We could not hear each other's voices because of the commotion."
The CID, which conducted the probe against Pal, said they would soon challenge the Barrackpore court's order in the high court.
Source: https://www.telegraphindia.com/states/west-bengal/ex-officer-recounts-jail-horror/cid/1414194 (Accessed 24 December 2018)
Source: https://www.telegraphindia.com/states/west-bengal/ex-officer-recounts-jail-horror/cid/1414194 (Accessed 24 December 2018)
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