Witnesses may have missed something, the passengers could have got it wrong and the media may be biased. But one week after Outlook exposed the startling contradictions between the police chargesheet and the depositions of witnesses, the officer who investigated the fire inside the Sabarmati Express on Feb 27, 2002, has admitted before the Justice G.T. Nanavati Inquiry Commission that the chargesheets he and other officers filed were inaccurate. He also revealed he had no evidence to show there was a pre-meditated conspiracy to burn the ill-fated S-6 coach which left 59 passengers dead.
During his cross-examination, the then deputy superintendent of police (railways), K.C. Bawa, who handled the Godhra investigations, had no answers to some of the questions posed to him. He openly admitted there were lapses in the investigation and that basic procedures followed in every criminal investigation were bypassed in this case.
Here are some of the key admissions Bawa made before the Commission:
- The very "basic aspects of any crime investigation" had been ignored in the Godhra case. Bawa stated that the 59 bodies were not photographed at the spot of the incident, which is a basic requirement in cases of unnatural death. The bodies were not sent for examination to the forensic science laboratory. And the panchnama (material evidence from the spot) was done two months after the incident.
- The medical reports of 70 survivors showed they had sustained burn injuries on the face and the chest—no one suffered injuries below the waist. When asked if this wasn't "a glaring contradiction" given that the police chargesheet spoke of a fire on the floor of the compartment, Bawa agreed. He also admitted he "had not investigated this aspect".
- During his investigation, Bawa admitted he "had not found anyone who saw anyone board the train with jerrycans of petrol or any material, nor had anyone seen someone torching the coach".
- He told the Commission he "assumed the fire started from near seat 72 for that side suffered maximum damage. But I don't know the reason for it".
- He said he "hadn't found any conspiracy to burn the coach nor had he found involvement of any foreign agencies".
- The forensic science laboratory (of the Gujarat government) report of May 17, 2002, concluded that after the examination of 550 kg of burnt material gathered from S-6 coach, there was no trace of petroleum hydrocarbons in the debris.