Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

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Sakobav
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Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by Sakobav » Wed Jul 21, 2010 7:35 am

Very tragic end to a crusader fighting mining Mafia and was shot by an illegal .12 country gun that to in front of High Court ! Sad news . Maybe members from Gujarat can shed more light


http://www.ahmedabadmirror.com/article/ ... ar-HC.html


By Ahmedabad Mirror Bureau
Posted On Wednesday, July 21, 2010 at 03:01:40 AM

Police and forensic officials look for clues at the spot where Jethva was shot. The assailants abandoned their motorcycle
A wildlife activist and crusader, who had started a campaign against the mining mafia that had endangered the Asiatic Lion in the Gir sanctuary, was brutally murdered near the Gujarat High Court on Tuesday night.

Amit Jethava, who had forced the Kodinar police to register complaints against the mining mafia through an RTI, was killed by two persons who came on a motorcycle and fired four rounds from close range from a revolver, police sources said.

A .12 bore revolver was found a little distance away from the spot. According to primary information, Jethava had got down the stairs of Satyamev Complex, bang opposite the high court, after having had a word with his advocate Vijay Nagesh around 8.45 pm.

As soon as he opened the door of his Maruti Gypsy, one of the duo fired at Jethava from behind, just three feet away. A dog squad that reached the spot found two live cartridges and one of the sandals of the culprits on a road some distance away from the spot.

An injured Jethva (inset) ran to the assailants, caught hold of them, but collapsed
Despite being fired at, Jethava ran after the duo, catching hold of one of them. However, they shook him off and ran towards the Sayona City in Ghatlodia, leaving their Bajaj Discover bike (registration number GJ-1 DG 2482) behind. Jethava collapsed and fell to the ground. He died on the spot.

H M Kundaliya, PI, Sola police station, said, “We are taking statements of eyewitnesses and people who had come to meet Jethava’s lawyer. We have relayed a message across police stations to nab the culprits.”

A resident of Vishwas City-II, Jethava is originally from Khambha village in Amreli district. He had filed a complaint against Aamir Khan in the Chinkara killing case and had taken up cudgels against the mining mafia in the Barda sanctuary.

But for Jethava and the RTI filed by him against the mafia, the police, that had refused to file complaint against the miners for four years, would never have registered a complaint. The hearing of as many as 35 illegal mines in the periphery of Gir is on in the high court.

Jethava’s cousin told Ahmedabad Mirror, “For the past some time, Jethava had taken up the fight against illegal mining in the Gir periphery. The complaint filed by the geologist there was not taken up and it was only after the RTI filed by Jethava that the complaint was registered. Several politicians are also involved in the illegal mining activity near Gir and evasion of duty worth crores of rupees.”

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by m24 » Wed Jul 21, 2010 9:40 am

I am wondering should one care for their own life or for the greater cause?? If only, we had better leaders, better police, better........the wishlist is long.

Another good man bites the dust.

Regards
Jeff Cooper advocated four basic rules of gun safety:
1) All guns are always loaded. Even if they are not, treat them as if they are.
2) Never let the muzzle cover anything you are not willing to destroy.
3) Keep your finger off the trigger till your sights are on the target.
4) Identify your target, and what is behind it.

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by jashwantsinh » Wed Jul 21, 2010 1:33 pm

Yes, Amit was a prominent activist and it's a great loss to the entire Gujarat region. He fought against all such Land, Mine, Forest mafias and opened their illegal activities under RTI, The greatest tool. Amit had licenced weapon with him but, could not get enough time to take it out of the holster and fire in defence, as entire incident took place with a few minutes. Till now no clue with the local police. i came to about the incident just after 10 minutes as i live 3 KM away. His father has demanded high level inquiry/investigation with Government. But, looks like nothing will workout as all MAFIAS and some of politicians were involved. Day by day we see that gereral publice not at all safe right from a small shop-keeper to a person like Amit.

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by nabeelmdkhan » Wed Jul 21, 2010 1:41 pm

Thats really Sad...

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by sa_ali » Wed Jul 21, 2010 4:36 pm

Another solider fallen :( .

These are the very reason that the politician dont want the citizens to be armed.

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by shooter » Wed Jul 21, 2010 5:09 pm

Dear M24. The system reflects the people. We need better citizens and the system will improve by itself.
Unfortunately i am preaching to the converted.
You want more gun control? Use both hands!

God made man and God made woman, but Samuel Colt made them equal.

One does not hunt in order to kill; on the contrary, one kills in order to have hunted. by Jose Gasset.

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by srswamy » Wed Jul 21, 2010 6:17 pm

How intimidating this is, for people who are taking up serious career in wildlife management/conservation?
The sad part is, no action will ever be taken against the culprits, at any point of time!! :evil:

May the noble soul rest in peace. Our land doesn't deserve good people, anymore. :cry:
At times, I stay silent. When I don't speak, it doesn't mean I don't have anything to say and running out of words. It only means that I have better things to do.

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by prashantsingh » Wed Jul 21, 2010 6:28 pm

Sad. Very Sad.
Reminds me of Dain Fossey, the American biologist who fought for almost two decades to save the Gorillas in Rwanda; and was later killed by poachers.

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by m24 » Wed Jul 21, 2010 9:59 pm

shooter wrote:Dear M24. The system reflects the people. We need better citizens and the system will improve by itself.
Unfortunately i am preaching to the converted.
I know, shooter, and therein lies our helplessness.

Regards
Jeff Cooper advocated four basic rules of gun safety:
1) All guns are always loaded. Even if they are not, treat them as if they are.
2) Never let the muzzle cover anything you are not willing to destroy.
3) Keep your finger off the trigger till your sights are on the target.
4) Identify your target, and what is behind it.

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by sa_ali » Tue Sep 07, 2010 1:59 pm


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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by Sakobav » Mon Jan 24, 2011 5:03 am

This was first page prominent news in Sundays New York Times - about Mr Jethwa's Sacrifice and exposing the nexus between land mafia and Political bog wigs and also the risk folks take in India fighting the system..it is a black mark against what India should all stand for that too from Gandhi's home state..if that means anything now anymore..Rhetorical question were the perpetrators found?

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/23/world ... hwa&st=cse

High Price for India’s Information Law
By LYDIA POLGREEN
Published: January 22, 2011

KODINAR, India — Amit Jethwa had just left his lawyer’s office after discussing a lawsuit he had filed to stop an illicit limestone quarry with ties to powerful local politicians. That is when the assassins struck, speeding out of the darkness on a roaring motorbike, pistols blazing. He died on the spot, blood pouring from his mouth and nose. He was 38.

Mr. Jethwa was one of millions of Indians who had embraced the country’s five-year-old Right to Information Act, which allows citizens to demand almost any government information. People use the law to stop petty corruption and to solve their most basic problems, like getting access to subsidized food for the poor or a government pension without having to pay a bribe, or determining whether government doctors and teachers are actually showing up for work.

But activists like Mr. Jethwa who have tried to push such disclosures further — making pointed inquiries at the dangerous intersection of high-stakes business and power politics — have paid a heavy price. Perhaps a dozen have been killed since 2005, when the law was enacted, and countless others have been beaten and harassed.

In many of these cases, the information requested involved allegations of corruption and collusion between politicians and big-money business.

“Now that power people are realizing the power of the right to information, there is a backlash,” said Amitabh Thakur, an activist and police official who is writing a book about people killed for demanding information under the law. “It has become dangerous.”

India may be the world’s largest democracy, but it remains dogged by the twin legacies of feudalism and colonialism, which have often meant that citizens are treated like subjects. Officials who are meant to serve them often act more like feudal lords than representatives of the people.

The law was intended to be a much-needed leveler between the governors and the governed. In many ways it has worked, giving citizens the power to demand a measure of accountability from bureaucrats and politicians.

When the law was passed, Mr. Jethwa, a longtime activist who nursed a lifelong grudge against those who abused official power, immediately seized upon it as a powerful new tool.

His objective was to stop illegal quarries near the Gir National Park, 550 square miles of scrubland and deciduous forest near his hometown, along the southern coast of Gujarat, India’s most prosperous state. The preserve is the only remaining habitat of the rare Asiatic lion. The animal is featured on the national emblem of India, and is considered by Hindus to be a sacred incarnation of Lord Vishnu.

But the forest sits in a mineral-rich area of coastal Gujarat dotted with cement factories that churn out building materials to fuel India’s near double-digit economic growth. The limestone that lies just beneath the soil in and around the Gir Forest is an ideal component of cement. By law, the forest and a three-mile boundary around it are off limits to all mining activity. But quarries the size of several football fields have been cut deep into the earth in the protected zone.

This mining has had serious consequences not only for the forest preserve, but also for water used for drinking and farming. The thirsty limestone is a natural barrier between seawater and fresh groundwater. A recent state government report concluded that limestone mining had allowed seawater to flow into the aquifer, causing an “irreversible loss.”

Balu Bhai Socha, an environmental advocate who worked with Mr. Jethwa, said the pace of mining rapidly increased as the local economy boomed.

“The speed with which the illegal mining was going on, we realized, within 10 years they will clean out the whole forest,” Mr. Socha said.

Mr. Jethwa repeatedly filed information requests to unearth the names of those operating the quarries and to see what action had been taken against them. He discovered there were 55 illegal quarries in and around the preserve. One name stood out among the records of land leases, electricity bills and inspection reports: Dinubhai Solanki, a powerful member of Parliament from the Bharatiya Janata Party, which governs Gujarat.

Mr. Solanki, who had risen from the State Legislature to Parliament, was a local kingmaker and an imperious presence. He had the backing of the local police and bureaucrats, activists here said. Mr. Jethwa and many others suspected that he was the mastermind and principal beneficiary of the illegal mining operation.

In February 2008, Mr. Jethwa was attacked by a gang of men on motorbikes. He was beaten so badly that he had to be hospitalized. He immediately suspected Mr. Solanki.

“If someone attacks me, or kills me in an accident, if my body is injured — for these acts the Kodinar MLA Dinu Solanki will be responsible,” he wrote in a letter to Gujarat’s chief minister, Narendra Modi, after the attack.

His father begged him to stop.

“I cautioned him several times about the danger,” the elder Mr. Jethwa said. “But he used to say: ‘Forget that you have three sons and say you have two sons. Let me do my work.’ He would say, ‘My religion is rule of law.’ ”

Mr. Jethwa’s information requests found sheaves of correspondence between forestry officials and local bureaucrats showing that despite repeated efforts to shut down the quarries, the practice continued.

By last June, he felt that he had amassed enough evidence to file a lawsuit to stop the mining. He filed the papers on June 28. On July 20, late at night, he was gunned down, leaving behind a wife and two children.

Because of his activism and the place where he died, practically on the doorstep of the state high court, political pressure forced an unusually swift investigation. Detectives used cellphone records to link Shiva Solanki, the nephew of Dinubhai Solanki, to the killing, and he has been charged with conspiracy and murder. He is accused of hiring a contract killer to murder Mr. Jethwa.

But few people believe that Shiva Solanki, who works for his uncle, could have carried out and paid for a contract killing on his own.

Anand Yagnik, a prominent human rights lawyer in Gujarat, said that the police had made no effort to investigate Mr. Solanki.

“The message that has gone out is that if you resort to your right to information to try to harass a political person, even after your murder, that man will go scot-free,” Mr. Yagnik said, seated below a portrait of Gandhi in his basement law office in Ahmedabad.

The police did not respond to repeated requests for comment on the investigation into Mr. Jethwa’s death. Mr. Solanki told reporters at his office here that because the case was under investigation he would not answer questions.

“You are welcome to sit here, have a cup of tea,” he said. “I will not say a word.”

Mr. Jethwa’s death has sent a chill through the community of activists here. Mr. Socha, the environmental activist, said that he now thought twice before challenging powerful interests and that he wondered if the risks were worth it.

“Our hearts are broken after his death,” Mr. Socha said. “You cannot fix the system. Everybody is getting money. If I give my life, what is the point?”

Hari Kumar contributed reporting.

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by abhrankash » Mon Jan 24, 2011 11:48 am

Every law that is being made by our law makers,suit them only it has never been made by keeping the general public in eye the law abiding citizens has always been a eye sore in their eyes.If you are a poor man then you are a eye bowl for them.

what has happened its really sad and loss of any human is intangible loss for the family,
You all will see nothing will happen to this case (high court shoot out at GUJ) police will be able to nab the killers and you will find its a big political nexus,I hope this murder is politically motivated and having corporate lobby.
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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by sa_ali » Mon Jan 24, 2011 12:20 pm

This is not the lone case, read this
http://www.lawyersclubindia.com/forum/R ... -24306.asp

Best is in the case of the Satish Shetty, he had request police protection, that was refused. I remember reading somewhere that he had even requested for the Arms License and that too was refused, I am unable to find that news article.

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Re: Gir Forest Wild life activist shot dead near HC

Post by abhrankash » Mon Jan 24, 2011 12:48 pm

I have read the case of Mr.shetty in TOI i cannot recall the date but I have read the whole story, Yes in our country we do not have witness protection programme and other programme they may protect the life of these whistle blowers who fought for common man and the society.

Won't you call this to be well planned killing strategy of the politicians and white collared babus for not having these kind of laws.
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