Wednesday 25 May 2022

Record Operation 136- 2018







https://www.newslaundry.com/2018/05/28/cobrapost-operation-136-acharya-atal-big-media-pushp-sharma-hindutva


https://thewire.in/media/cobrapost-sting-big-media-houses-say-yes-to-hindutva-black-money-paid-news


https://thewire.in/media/forget-the-cobra-that-stings-we-need-to-worry-about-the-media-that-poisons


https://thewire.in/media/times-group-says-vineet-jain-was-conducting-reverse-sting-on-cobrapost


https://indianexpress.com/article/india/sting-17-media-firms-ready-to-push-communal-reports-for-cash-cobrapost-5112476/



Thursday 26 April 2018

Operation 136

                         


  On 26 March 2018, Indian equivalent of Cambridge Analytica was brought forth... the aspect of the campaign advanced by the onscreen curator to such media houses, was to specifically plant news items to denigrate and sully the opposition. The content nationally rocked the social media.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6xEcQln0Ps

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Cv-bcxq01c

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FaQ1I2tIDI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pB7UAUP72xg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvBzvqh22-U

The operation literally gave us video evidence of media houses being sold out to serve the ruling party's interests and the consequences of this are as big as IT cells and fake news. Why aren't we as a country discussing this more?
I understand that nobody registered an FIR for this to be investigated and that the accused media houses themselves wouldn't do anything about it, but the discussion on social media has been really muted.


GOI :  “हम बोलने की आज़ादी और सोशल मीडिया पर खुले विचारों के सम्प्रेषण का समर्थन करते हैं लेकिन सोशल मीडिया का दुरुपयोग कर अवांछनीय तरीके से चुनावों को प्रभावित करने के प्रयासों को बर्दाश्त नहीं किया जायेगा”.  

कुछ इसी तरह की सच्चाई ऑपरेशन 136 दर्शाती है जिसमें कई भारतीय मीडिया हाउस पैसे के बदले कंटैंट से समझौता करने के लिए तैयार दिखे फिर चाहे बात इलैक्शन के दौरान हिन्दुत्व का प्रचार या फिर ध्रुवीकरण की हो. हर चीज़ के लिए इन मीडिया प्रतिष्ठानों के लोग सहमत हो गए. मीडिया प्रतिष्ठान जिसमे प्रिंट, इलेक्ट्रॉनिक और डिजिटल जैसे प्लैट्फॉर्म के ऊंचे पदों पर बैठे लोग न सिर्फ तैयार थे बल्कि मोटी रकम के बदले इस सुनियोजित योजना को जोकि एक खुल्लमखुल्ला साम्प्रदायिक मीडिया कैम्पेन था, को चलाने और सफल बनाने के लिए सैकड़ों रास्ते भी बताए.


Print Coverage -

http://thewirehindi.com/38449/cobra-post-operation-136-alleges-paid-news-agenda-by-indian-media/

https://www.boomlive.in/peddling-hindutva-for-money-cobrapost-stings-media-houses-in-operation-136/

https://www.newslaundry.com/2018/03/27/cobrapost-expose-hindutva-dainik-jagran-india-tv

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/cobrapost-says-paid-news-widespread/article23357752.ece

http://hindi.catchnews.com/india/cobrapost-sting-operation-136-17-media-houses-ready-to-polarize-voters-for-money-104947.html

https://www.outlookhindi.com/politics/general/congress-president-rahul-gandhi-tweet-on-operation-136-done-by-cobrapost-25590

http://www.business-standard.com/article/current-affairs/sting-shows-some-media-houses-ready-to-polarise-voters-on-hindutva-for-cash-118032600837_1.html



Videos -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zx-TpcdyZo

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-qu9Jgvq3B4

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96ElzY1HYQs










Tuesday 13 June 2017

RSF calls for end to legal proceedings


https://rsf.org/en/rsf-calls-end-legal-proceedings-against-indias-cobrapost 

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) calls for the withdrawal of the legal actions that many Indian media outlets have brought against Cobrapost, an investigative news website whose undercover reporting has shown that most of India’s leading media groups would take money from the ruling party in return for favourable coverage. RSF also urges all of these media groups to respect their staff’s editorial independence.

Cobrapost named its undercover investigation Operation 136 in reference to India’s ranking in RSF's 2017 World Press Freedom Index. And what it found could explain why this country, the cradle of an exceptionally dynamic press, has fallen so low.


Cobrapost posted an initial series of videos in March and a second series, “Part II,” on 25 May. They show Cobrapost reporter Pushp Sharma posing as a right-wing Hindu nationalist activist meeting the owners of 27 leading media groups while carrying a hidden camera.

He offered each of them significant sums of money – to be paid in cash if necessary – in return for favourable coverage of the activities of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party in the run-up to the 2019 general election. Almost all of these media bosses accepted the offer and most of them promised to set up special teams for this purpose.

After the latest series of Operation 136 videos were released, three of the targeted media groups sent legal notices to Cobrapost and to other independent media outlets, such as The Wire and The Quint, that published stories about the Cobrapost sting on their own websites.


Saturday 14 January 2017

Why Corporate media is dangerous for democracy?



Pushp Sharma Pushp Sharma is an investigative journalist known for exposing the malaise of paid news in the Indian media industry through the sting operation series code-named "Operation 136" that he conducted for Cobrapost. The investigation revealed how some of India's biggest news organizations and media houses were ready to influence the elections by favouring a party and by planting false news items against the opposition in exchange for money.[1][2][3][4] The undercover investigation 'Operation 136:Part 1', released on 26 March 2018, exposed 17 media houses. But only some videos of 'Operation 136: Part II' were released due to a restraining order brought by the Delhi High Court on the plea of Dainik Bhaskar, one of the media houses stung during the investigation.[5] Pushp Sharma has been the recipient of the International Press Institute Award (Vienna) for ‘Excellence in Journalism’ in year 2011 for his story “Rent a Riot” published in Tehelka. [6][7][8]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pushp_Sharma

At the turn of the 21st century, nearly half of the world population still lacks access to free information. Freedom of information is the freedom that allows you to verify the existence of all the other freedoms.

GUARANTEEING ALL THE FREEDOMS

In 1948, the United Nations said in article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that “freedom of opinion and expression” implies the right to “seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

GUARANTEEING HUMAN DIGNITY

UNESCO’s constitution says the unrestricted pursuit of objective truth is indispensable to human dignity and freedom. Freedom of information is a sine qua non of growth in all the social, economic and political possibilities available to the individual.

PROMOTING DEMOCRACY

In dictatorial regimes, the state apparatus is able to dominate and a few monopolize most of the wealth because journalists are neutralized. Independent journalism is therefore crucial for a “high intensity” democracy.


Story Sequence

International media has long documented assaults, arrests, and even killings of journalists who covered sensitive issues in India, including human right violations, vigilante groups, and corruption, including around access to minerals and natural resources. Authorities have used the various Act ( Arms Act, Information Technology Act , IPC 153A and even sedition ) to try to silence critical coverage.

It may seem that the odds are against us at this moment, but human rights have always won and will this time also. The arc of the moral universe is long, as Dr Martin Luther King said, but it bends towards justice.

 

While constitutional definition of SECTION 153 A: its here ….

The purpose of the Section 153 A is to punish persons who indulge in wanton vilification or attacks upon the religion, race, place of birth, residence, language etc of any particular group or class or upon the founders and prophets of a religion. The jurisdiction of this Section is widened so as to make promotion of disharmony, enmity or feelings of hatred or ill-will between different religious, racial, language or regional groups or castes or communities punishable. Offence on moral turpitude is also covered in this section. The offence is a cognizable offence and the punishment for the same may extend to three years, or with fine, or with both. However, the punishment of the offence committed in a place of worship is enhanced up to five years and fine.

Shooting the messenger –

As it often happens, when your stories hurt certain interests, or powerful individuals, it is you who are either hounded or witch-hunted both by the establishment and by the political bosses at large. I am no exception to this phenomenon.

Why I prefer to remain Independent Journalist?

o   I prefer to be identified as ‘independent journalist’ at least I can do hard hitting stories which corporate media never allows to do. I m not a pro government journalist rather I m anti establishment journalist. I raise voice of voiceless to uphold value of democracy and write to expose State-sponsored terrorism because I m byproduct of independent journalism (anti corporate controlled journalism).

 

o   I get my strength from activists currently behind bars or facing a deluge of cases for not wavering in their commitment to uphold constitutional rights.

Why Corporate media is dangerous for democracy?

Unfortunately we are living in an era of gross inequality, total surveillance, global war and rampant lawlessness of state powers, the role of corporate media in this escalating tragedy has come under increasing scrutiny.

o   Along with the obvious conflicts of interest of lobbyists and CEOs serving on interlocking boards, print and online newspapers depend heavily on news agencies both in general and for information that would otherwise be too expensive to obtain. Under this system, statements of government officials and agencies are published verbatim and uncritically. Obviously societies in decline have no use for visionaries.

 

o   The lesson here is very simple: journalistic negligence of any sort – which can be caused by conflict of interest, editorial framing, or fear of challenging powerful figures for career reasons (loss of future access) — has cost innocent lives by the million.

Conclusive note –

o  

o   I never lived a life of excuses and misguided beliefs about what is and is not possible. It’s time to realize the truth and I take it in positive manner that the odds are not against you. It’s time to get out of your own way and start living the life you have imagined (being a writer / journalist ).

 

o    I feel it’s just a phase and it will pass. I m hopeful that bitter harsh realities of India might change in future.  You will find that the common streak running through lives of heroes, their ability to stand up every time they fall.

It’s the time to keep fighting odds. Keep writing from wheresoever I m. constantly updating Indians (common masses) informed about me and let them decide. I am proud I stayed true to myself.  With respect from others and most important: PRIDE and RESPECT from myself.

Just prayers won’t bring peace in the world. We have to take steps to tackle the violence and corruption that disrupt peace. We can’t expect change if we don’t take action.

Although I am sad to leave India and the many wonderful friends and colleagues, I find comfort in the fact that goodbyes are not forever; they are just temporal gestures made in anticipation of a future meeting.

If I have said anything which appears to you to be erroneous, I hope you will pardon me. I know you always like people to speak truth. That is what has emboldened me in writing this long letter.

With respectful Pranams,

Pushp Kumar Sharma

Friday 13 February 2015

delhipolice.nic.in/home/backup/22-11-2009.doc





http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/ipiindia-award-for-tehelka-the-week/article2568418.ece

अंतराष्ट्रिय अवॉर्ड जीतने के बाद भी ये इनाम मिला 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z61owRJD4KU 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CR-ZnlEs8Io
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVd3nl2bTko


http://pushpsharma1382.blogspot.in/




http://www.outlookindia.com/article/If-The-Pose-Holds/282475

 दिल्ली पुलिस का एक ओर झूट  - delhipolice.nic.in/home/backup/22-11-2009.doc 



  दिल्ली पुलिस का एक ओर झूट  - delhipolice.nic.in/home/backup/22-11-2009.doc




delhipolice.nic.in/home/backup/22-11-2009.doc

24 सितंबर 2009 को आई पी एस अजय कश्यप को लिखित मैं दी गयी मेरी शिकायत 
पुलिस के खिलाफ शिकायत करने का सबक मुझे डेड महीने बाद सीखा दिया गया. जब मैने धमकीयों के आगे झुकने से माना कर दिया तो मेरे खिलाफ एक झुटा केस बनाया गया ओर आज 6 साल बीतने के बाद भी मैं ये लड़ाई लड़ रहा हूँ ....




उपर लिखी मेरी शिकायत देख लें ओर नीचे लिखी पुलिस का कच्चा चिठ्ठा देख लें - वही पुलिस वाला ने  खुद को बचाने के लिए मेरे खिलाफ नयी कहानी बना दी. 

delhipolice.nic.in/home/backup/22-11-2009.doc



            



Saturday 1 February 2014

IPI Award - Rent A Riot

Tehelka’s Pushp Sharma’s story exposing the leadership of Shree Ram Sene agreeing to start a riot in exchange for payment in Karnataka won the the International Press Institute’s (IPI) Award Ceremony for Excellence in Journalism 2011.

http://archive.tehelka.com/story_main44.asp?filename=Ne220510coverstory.asp
FOR THE RIGHT PRICE, YOU CAN GET THE SRI RAM SENE TO ORGANISE A RIOT ANYWHERE. AN EXPOSÉ BY PUSHP SHARMA.


https://www.facebook.com/Pushp.UK


Tuesday 24 December 2013

Domestic Workers - Mistreatment, Sexual Harassment to Low wages

https://www.facebook.com/Pushp.UK


From mistreatment, sexual harassment to low wages, domestic workers are in a poor state in India with hardly any legal protections.

The Devyani Khobragade diplomatic wrangle, which is being sorted at the ministry levels between India and United States, has definitely highlighted a pertinent issue -- how we Indians treat our domestic help. The stories of mistreatment can come as a shocker for those who think India has shed her feudal, caste-based system.

To begin with I have a huge grouse of the usage of the word ‘servant’ which as per the Oxford dictionary is originally an old French word “For employing a person to perform domestic duties.” It reeks of colonial hangover, as the term ‘servant’ was used by the British for hired Indian domestic help. We Indians are still feudal by nature and hence find it tough to shed this word, much worse, the attitude that comes along with it.

In many cases we have seen how young maids and cooks are often sexually targeted by male employers. The case of actor Shiney Ahuja was a rare one, where the maid reported the incident of rape and she got help from other neighbours who backed her story.

As a child I remember the men from Western ghats would come to Mumbai to work as domestic help, were termed as ghatis. A word that later turned into a slang to call Maharashtrians, especially the Marathi-speaking ones who could not communicate in English. After the violent, political ideology of certain ‘Marathi manoos’ parties, the term ghati faded from public speech.

In fact, decades ago in Girgaum, the neighbourhood full-time helps were called Pandharis -- men who worked and lived in the houses of rich folks. Spoken in hushed whispers was also that these Pandharis doubled up as male companions for the ladies, whose rich husbands often ignored them. And their children were looked after by the families.

With time the Pandharis were seen as bonded labour and the government banned this practice and soon not only the term, this sort of employment too disappeared from Mumbai. In fact a much worse form of domestic employment that is has been well-hidden is that of employing child labour. It is only since last seven years that the elite in Mumbai have been compelled to stop employing child labour, which is most often cheap labour too. This is because the government of Maharashtra had become stricter in implementing the anti-child labour laws.

I recollect how a senior lady journalist, who knew I used to go to tribal villages in Thane district, wanted me to bring back a tribal girl to work in her house. She tried to sweet talk me, not realising she her actions could’ve have scandalous repercussions. She had told me how she and her husband would go to work and they had two sons who need to be taken care of. She thought the girl could stay home, play with the boys and the couple would take care of the help’s education, lodging and boarding. She thought of it as an act of charity.

Now if this is scandalous, the fact that our very own ‘public servants’ who frame the rules and policies, are often the first ones to break them. Many bureaucrats and especially retired Indian Police Service officers expect their orderlies to continue to give them their shoes, make them wear them and are often treated in inhuman ways. The stories of bureaucrats in remote districts are gory enough to make to the corridors of Mantralaya. One hears these stories lesser now but it may still be long before these things stopped.

Many employ underage girls brought from remote villages on the pretext of educating them. The families of these girls are paid pittance and one doesn’t know the wages paid to the girls. In Delhi, many families too are known to employ such young girls, who are often locked inside their houses, under the pretext that it is unsafe for village, small-town girls to go out alone. So, while the families are away till late hours, the girls sit holed up in apartments, not stepping out for days.

And the last issue that the biggest overhaul in domestic workers sector is the payment of wages. Many households shy away from paying their non-full time domestic help even three-figure wages.

Friday 12 July 2013

Sick Man Walking -http://archive.tehelka.com/story_main45.asp?filename=Ne190610sick_man.asp


Sick Man Walking
Satyam’s Raju has been in hospital for nine months, evading trial even via video conferencing. Pushp Sharma got himself admitted into the same hospital and found the former IT czar ill, but fit for trial

B RAMALINGA RAJU, disgraced chairman of Satyam Computer Services, evaded US law by surrendering to the Indian authorities on January 7, 2009. For over a year, he has remained in judicial custody but has frustrated all attempts of the CBI to take the cases of economic fraud against him forward. Since September 2009, when his lawyers pleaded his unfitness on medical grounds, he has not put in a single appearance in court although his six co-accused have been appearing dutifully when summoned.
The CBI, in its probe into the Rs 3,300 crore scam, has collected all the facts it needs, submitted two chargesheets and wants to commit the case to trial. It just needs Raju to make a short appearance in court and plead guilty/not guilty. Once this is achieved, the unraveling of the tale of fraud and cheating to build a real estate empire for the Raju family can begin. But even in this high profile case, justice is being delayed, thanks to various devious means adopted by the accused.
On September 9, 2009, just before his 56th birthday, Raju, incarcerated in Chanchalguda Jail, complained of chest pain. Soon after, he was admitted to the Nizam’s Institute for Medical Sciences (NIMS). Doctors indicated even then that he could be there for as long as a year, as he needed treatment for Hepatitis C, contracted eight years ago. Usually, patients of this disease turn critical after 10–15 years, when there is a chance of contracting liver cancer. The liver treatment, doctors said, would start only six weeks after the cardiac investigations.
The game of evasion has been on since then. When Raju was arrested, the court had ordered that he was allowed to meet only his wife and son. In March, however, the CBI submitted a list of visitors who had met Raju in hospital. Shockingly, the number ran to 234 — from just December to February.
Despite this, Raju continued to plead that he was unfit to appear in court. On April 23, Raju did not appear before the fast-track court which was to examine the daily case-sheets and investigations conducted on the patient since March 31. The NIMS authorities had submitted that he needs to continue as an in-patient for another few weeks. The CBI said it was willing to examine Raju through video conferencing or any other means. The court adjourned the case until April 30.
April 30: Judicial remand of Raju and nine others was extended to May 7. The court asked for a fresh medical report of his condition.
June 7: NIMS authorities pleaded inability to prepare the medical report on time.
June 9: NIMS authorities did not make an appearance in court. The hearing on the CBI’s petition for videoconferencing was then postponed to June 14.
That’s where it stands now: 18 months after Raju’s surrender, the trial is yet to start. The cynical would say elite criminals always manage to get admitted to hospitals, where comforts like air-conditioning and food sent from home are assured. A far better option than spending 25 years in jail in the US, where a Texas court has convicted Raju of fraud, forgery and breach of contract in a case filed by British firm Upaid.
Around mid-May, when TEHELKA got hold of the CBI’s list of visitors, it decided it was high time the world knew just how ill and incapacitated Ramalinga Raju really is. The only way to do this was to enter the hospital and make direct enquiries about his health, maybe record his condition. We started the investigation on June 1. Damagingly, what we found was a man who certainly is ill with Hepatitis C, but also a man well enough to take a brisk, daily 20-minute walk and laugh and joke with nurses. On June 7, we finally got empirical evidence: under difficult circumstances, we captured footage of Raju walking through the corridor. With this evidence on camera, the question is, how much longer can Raju pretend he is too frail for a trial via video-conference from his sick bed? And how much longer can his friends cover for him?
This is how we got the story.
As the reporter assigned to provide this evidence with a spycam, I needed a cover. Since there are policemen posted outside his hospital room, one cannot just walk in. The entry to the VIP ward, called the Dr Muthu Ranga Reddy Private Rooms (MPR), is guarded by a locked gate. Since the CBI complained about Raju’s prolific visitors, security has been tightened. The only way I could get into that enclosure would be as a patient. That too a wealthy patient with a sudden need for attention from gastroenterologists.
Nizam’s Hospital is located in the heart of the city, bang in the middle of the twin cities of Hyderabad and Secunderabad and spread over 23 acres. I decided to pose as an exporter, one who was willing and able to foot a large bill just to get a diagnosis of the burning pains in my stomach. By a stroke of luck, the specialist assigned to me was the very same one treating Raju for his liver problems. I spun a spiel about my itinerant lifestyle, my travels to source goods for export. I explained to him that I hardly ever had meals on time, and that I tended to drink heavily in lonely hotel rooms during my travels. I was often stressed negotiating good prices and lucrative contracts. The good doctor agreed with alacrity when I said I wanted to be admitted for five days to a private room costing Rs 2,500 per night so that investigations could be carried out properly. Of course, I had other ‘investigations’ in mind.
On Wednesday, June 3, I was admitted to the private ward with 117 rooms, hoping against hope that I would be on the same floor as the former chairman of Satyam. The universe intervened. I was allotted a room on the ground floor right next to Raju’s Room No. 11, which had a posse of policemen outside. My ‘wife’, a colleague from the office too young to look like a real spouse, was told to stay in a hotel and only pick up my cameras every 24 hours for recharging. Now I had to gain the confidence of the staff and try to get some information on Raju’s condition. I knew that he was given to taking morning walks in jail, and hoped he would do the same here. Or was he too ill to leave his room, as his lawyers claimed?
Over the next few days, I chatted up 40-year-old Nageshramma, a nurse from Kerala, who talked of how Raju was relaxed enough to crack jokes. One was about cable TV being a magnet drawing her to the room. She said he was ill but his condition had improved.
Apart from this, I cultivated two ward boys who had to attend to me on different shifts. I underwent an ultrasound and various blood tests, hoping there would be no sudden twist in my own medical history. I thought of the simple stratagem of softening up the ward boys by asking them to buy me food from outside — not only was this more suitable to a prosperous businessman’s diet but it gave me a chance to tip them. I told them that I used to work for Satyam years ago and would like a chance to salute Raju. I learnt that he pays Rs 75,000 per month for his room, Rs 80,000 for his injections. A princely sum for an under-trial.
I could not have found any of this through official queries but I still needed the breakthrough which would answer the questions the nation is asking. Then came a crucial clue: I was told Raju took a morning walk up and down the corridor around 4 am. This was my big chance. Next morning, I posted myself at the window of my room and pointed three cameras at different parts of the courtyard. First came a man using a walker, then a policeman. Finally, at 5.35 am, the door of the room opened and Raju emerged, a simple man in a white pyjama-kurta, somehow smaller than I expected, maybe because of the larger than life image he had projected. There was no hobble, no shuffle, no signs of illness except a darkening of skin caused by the medicines he was taking. His stride was confident, even youthful. Here was evidence that the man was fit, at the very least, to walk into a courtroom, sit on a chair and answer a few questions. If not that, then certainly answer questions lying in his bed.
But even a camera can lie when it comes to a man’s mental condition. Was Raju perhaps in a befuddled state, suffering loss of memory or confusion? From what I gathered from the nurse, the man who once went to Harvard Business School was very much in possession of his senses. The nurse’s retelling of the jokes he cracks implied a man fit in mind.
Once I had recorded this, it was time to leave. Locked gates and five armed policemen round the clock had not proved a deterrent. The whole of Sunday, my last day as an exporter with undiagnosed stomach pains, Raju was with his wife. Money obviously cushions you even when you are on the wrong side of the law.

Tehelka posed as an exporter in pain.
All through Sunday, Raju had his wife
with him. Money is a great cushion
Satyam's Raju has been in hospital for nine months, evading trial even via video conferencing. Pushp Sharma got himself admitted into the same hospital and found the former IT czar ill, but fit for trial (on camera). The CBI, in its probe into the Rs 3,300 crore (USD 715 million) scam, has collected all the facts it needs, submitted two chargesheets and wants to commit the case to trial. It just needs Raju to make a short appearance in court and plead guilty/not guilty. Once this is achieved, the unraveling of the tale of fraud and cheating to build a real estate empire for the Raju family can begin. But even in this high profile case, justice is being delayed, thanks to various devious means adopted by the accused.




Little bit patience please ...more expose soon. 




Saturday 1 June 2013

If The Pose Holds




 
An Outlook-IBN investigation, conducted over several months, catches policemen and others spilling the beans on the shoddy investigation into the disappearance of Swami Shankardev, Baba Ramdev’s guru
“I have taken some loan from you for this trust but I couldn’t repay you. Please forgive me. I am leaving.”
These 21 words in three selective lines (the police wouldn’t part with the original or a copy) indicate that the author ‘left’ of his own accord, even provides a plausible motive. But five years after Baba Ramdev’s guru, Swami Shankardev, went missing from the Divya Yog ashram in Haridwar in July 2007, the mystery behind his disappearance has not been lifted; in fact, more intrigue has unravelled after an Outlook-IBN undercover investigation. And not only because someone tampered with the date of the letter and sought to make it July 14 from July 11; or because the police was informed by Ramdev’s Man Friday, Acharya Balkrishna, only on July 16, a full two days or more after his disappearance.
The investigation, which recorded conversations with six police officers (besides ashram inmates, doctors and others), reveals a strange, even shocking, indifference to the disappearance of the 78-year-old founder and helmsman of the ashram. Equally strangely, the ashram showed no interest in tracing the whereabouts of the missing guru—a man who once held veto power over the Divya Yog Trust. And stranger still, the police displayed no urgency to investigate till “something or someone” decided earlier this year that the case had to be formally closed.
The policeman who filed the final report (FR) this April admits on camera that he was “forced” to file it. He says he was reluctant to do so because of the sensitivity of the case but was bluntly told that he would have to close the case if he valued his job. Now, who would be interested in bringing such pressure on the police and why? That too after the file had gathered dust for five years?
It remains unclear what really happened in July 2007—or in the run-up to it. Ramdev, the present head, was himself out of the country at the time. Swami Shankardev’s ‘final letter’—addressed to Ramdev’s brother-in-law Yash Dev Shastri—would have people believe that the guru, who suffered from tuberculosis of the spinal cord and possibly of the lungs, “left” because he could not repay his “loans”. One inmate alleges that Shankardev was reduced to selling cardboard and styrofoam boxes of medicines to foot his medical bills during his last few months at the ashram. 
How much money could Swami Shankardev have taken as loan, when, and for what purpose? At the time of his disappearance, he held two bank accounts: one (a/c 0251000-100-100-172) at the Punjab National Bank, which had a balance of Rs 2,420, and the other at the Indian Overseas Bank (a/c 51879), which had a balance of Rs 1,881. But with the ashram expanding and thriving (its 2007 turnover was Rs 50 crore), why would he find it difficult to repay any loan? What is more, the people to whom he ostensibly owed money were also inmates of the ashram and hardly cash rich.
 
 
Shankardev’s accounts held a paltry Rs 4,000, but he was an authorised signatory to the Rs 50-cr trust’s bank accounts.
 
 
Strangely, the police seem to have no clue about most things concerning the case—about how much money the missing guru owed, whether the guru is merely missing or whether he committed suicide or was eliminated. Some of the investigating officers have been candid in confessing on record that a proper investigation is carried out only when they are prodded into action. In this case, neither the senior officers nor the complainant evinced much interest in tracking the missing guru. So virtually no investigation was done. “Hum log kaam, sahi bataoon, toh tabhi karte hain jab pressure hota hai...hamare upar toh koi aisa pressure thha bhi nahin! Maine bahut zyada kaam isme, frankly, kiya bhi nahin (Frankly, I didn’t do much on this case because there was no pressure of any kind),”  said an investigating officer on camera.
Surprisingly, Baba Ramdev did not meet the investigators even once regarding the disappearance of his guru, the man who transferred the Divya Yog ashram to him and made him chairman.
So, in April 2012, the police closed the case, having failed to make any headway. So what’s new? Thousands of Indians disappear every year, never to be found. But then Shankardev was not just another old man. He was one of the four trustees and had the powers to veto decisions taken by the trust. While his two personal bank accounts had a combined balance of a paltry four thousand rupees, he was an authorised signatory and could operate the trust’s bank accounts.
And yet, his disappearance did not create much of a flutter. The ashram showed little urgency in trying to trace its own founder, who had voluntarily given up the reins of the ashram in 1995 to his far more worldly-wise and nationally known disciple, Baba Ramdev.
Investigations conducted by the police were perfunctory. Explains SI R.B. Chamola, a member of the investigating team, “Nobody took any interest in this case; I do not remember anyone ever asking about the progress of the investigation.” Chamola, incidentally, is the same man who led a special Delhi Police team which arrested Sher Singh Rana, former dacoit queen Phoolan Devi’s killer, from Calcutta after he had escaped from Tihar—a “competent policeman” with 52 encounters under his belt.
Chamola admits on camera that the old man could have been a victim of a criminal conspiracy: “Aaj bhi agar aap Haridwar mein jaoge to kaafi sare log yehi kahenge ki yeh sab inhi ka kiya hua kaam hai (Even now, if you go to Haridwar, people will freely say it’s an inside job).”
Chamola adds: “Guru inhi ke paas thhe, missing bhi inhi ki taraf se registered hui kyunki saari cheezein dekhte bhi yahi thhe. Ab jab ek complainer hai uski family ya wohi kuch complaint nahi kar raha hai police se. (Guru lived with others in the ashram. Missing complaint was filed by them as they looked after everything. Now, when a complainant is not following up, what can be done?)”
An old associate of Shankardev, Karamveer, Chamola added, had also voiced his doubts over the disappearance of the titular head. Karamveer left the ashram after Swamiji handed over charge to Ramdev. Vipin Pradhan, a colleague of Karamveer at the Divya Yog ashram, also left with him. According to the police report, when the investigating officer met Vipin, he said: “Trust mein bhai-bhatijawaad badh gaya thha. Purane logon ki awhelna ho rahi thhi. Shankardevji 70-75 saal ke buzurg hain. Beemar bhi rehte hain. Balkrishanji aur Ramdev ke vyavhar se dukhi thhe. Unko koi nahi poochta thha. Na hi unki koi haisiyat thhi. (Blood relations were given preference over senior people in the ashram. Shankardev was an old, sick man. He was upset with the behaviour of Balkrishnaji and Ramdev. Nobody bothered about him, nor did he have any say over there.)”
Earlier this year, pressure was finally exerted to get the case closed. SI Surendra Bisht, who filed the FR in April 2012, claims he had initially refused, on the plea that it was a sensitive case and required supervision of officers holding superior positions. “Main toh bas SI hi hoon (I am just an SI),” he had protested. But he was bluntly told that he would have to pay a heavy price if he failed to comply with the order. “Kyun, naukri nahin karni hai kya? (Don’t you want to continue in service?)”  he was asked. Not surprisingly, he agreed to close the case (“Maine kaha theek hai, theek hai”).
The case should have been treated far more seriously from the beginning, he reflected, saying far greater urgency was on display while closing the case.
Pradeep Chauhan, investigating officer of the case in 2011, when contacted, ruled out any possibility of foul play. But he conceded that in 2007 Ramdev was well respected and his stars were in the ascendant. He was not embroiled in any controversy or dispute either. “It is possible that because of his aura, nobody suspected any foul play,” he says.
Documents related to the investigation indicate that Shankardev’s final letter was sent for forensic examination along with several samples of the old man’s writing. The report of the forensic lab at Dehradun confirmed that the handwriting in the letter matched that of the one in the samples. But the date on the letter had been tampered with and a different date had been overwritten with the help of a different pen and with different ink.
First person reports raise sufficient doubts to merit a reinvestigation. By all accounts, Shankardev was a well-meaning person and was not driven by worldly ambitions of expanding his empire. He had handed over the reins of the ashram at the age of 66 to Ramdev.
The most damning indictment, though, comes from a former driver at the ashram, Rahul. The old man in later years was treated with utter disdain, he claims. The ashram, which was rolling in money and boasted of a fleet of cars, would refuse to provide a vehicle and ask him to take a rickshaw instead when he travelled. The old man would often lament his decision to cede control of the ashram to others and speak to people sympathetic to him. On such occasions, he would often be beaten up by the bouncers (“Andar ke jo worker hain, woh batate thhe ki aaj Maharajji pe bajaya hai”). Rahul also says on camera that the old man was more fond of Karamveer. But whenever he was caught speaking to the former inmate over the phone, he would be locked up and confined by way of punishment. Shankardev, he claims, was suffering from several ailments but was not treated properly.
Investigation by the police also found that Shankardev had not been to see his doctor for at least a year-and-a-half before he disappeared, though he suffered from tuberculosis of the lungs as well as the spinal cord. But Dr Kamal Nayan Gambhir  claimed he was suffering from spinal tuberculosis alone and had been to see him even on the day he disappeared. Which of the two claims can be deemed credible and why would the police ‘misquote’ the doctor?
A shoddy investigation, police indifference and inaction followed by a sudden burst of activity to put a lid on the case, have raised many eyebrows in this hills district. A dark shadow still hangs over an old man’s disappearance.