Areesh
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JAIPUR: Along with the Malegaon case, the trial of the Ajmer blasts too appears to be hanging in suspense, with an assistant public prosecutor in Rajasthan saying that as many as 13 key witnesses in the case have turned hostile between November 2014 and May 2015.
While it's not unusual for witnesses to change their statements made to the police in a court at the time of trial, one of the witnesses who has gone back on his statement is a minister in Jharkhand's BJP government, Randheer Singh, said the assistant public prosecutor of the Ajmer blast case Ashwini Kumar.
"Singh was declared hostile in the court on May 6, 2015, as he went back on his statements," prosecutor Sharma told TOI on Saturday.
In his testimony to the investigating agencies, Randheer Singh had claimed to have seen two of the accused in the Ajmer blast case test-fire a weapon. A CBI court (special judge) in Jaipur has been conducting the Ajmer blast case's trial.
The blast at the dargah of the Sufi saint Moinuddin Chisti in October 2007 killed three people and wounded over a dozen. Initial investigations were conducted by the Rajasthan anti-terror squad and later taken over by the National Investigating Agency, which chargesheeted 12 people.
"The 'material witnesses' on whose testimony the case's outcome depends started coming from November last year. One by one, they started turning hostile," said Sharma, the assistant public prosecutor.
Witnesses turning hostile in such large numbers are likely to add to the controversies that started after Rohini Salian, the special public prosecutor in the Malegaon case, recently said that under the NDA, she was asked by the NIA to go slow in the Malegaon blast case, which too involves accused from Hindu outfits.
13 witnesses turned hostile in Ajmer blast case in 6 months - The Times of India