Cops blame ‘non-cooperative’ Army for delay in completing probe

Almost 13 months after the killing of two youths at Chattergam in Budgam, Army men will depose before the police for recording their statements for the first time.

Cops blame ‘non-cooperative’ Army for delay in completing probeThe police have been blaming the Army for the delay in filing a challan in the case in the competent court, alleging that the Army had not been cooperating with their investigation.

Two youths — Faisal Yousuf (17) and Meraj-u-din Dar (21) — were killed and two others injured on November 3 when Army men of the 53 Rashtriya Rifles battalion, manning a checkpoint at Chattergam village in Budgam, opened fire on the car they were travelling in.

The killing sparked outrage across the Valley and the Army later termed the killing as “a mistake”. The state police had already recorded the statements of the two injured boys and other civilian eyewitnesses during the investigation into the case.

“The investigating officer forwarded nearly a dozen communications to the Army unit in the last one year, asking it to record the statements of men deployed at the naka, but it had not responded so far. This is the precise reason for not being able to complete our investigation,” said a senior police officer.

The Army was yet to deposit the weapons for forensic examination, which it had not done so far, the officer said. The Army authorities said deposition of witnesses in the case would commence from Monday.

“The Army has been extending full cooperation to the civil administration and the Jammu and Kashmir Police with respect to the Chattergam incident. Senior Army officers are maintaining constant liaison with the Budgam Senior Superintendent of Police. Deposition by witnesses is scheduled to commence tomorrow,” said a senior Army officer in Srinagar.

The Army had completed a court of inquiry into the case and was waiting for the police and magisterial probe to move ahead in the case.

Sources said the court of inquiry had indicted nearly a dozen soldiers, including a Junior Commissioned Officer of the 53 Rashtriya Rifles, for violating rules of engagement in Chattergam.

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