Mumbai: Former Supreme Court judge Jasti Chelameswar rued Friday that no proper legal structure was ever laid down for the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

He was speaking at an interactive session hosted by the All India Professionals Congress, an organisation affiliated to the Congress party, here.

Asked about the recent turmoil within the CBI, where the two senior most officials have levelled allegations against each other, Chelameswar said that "nobody issued (defined) a legal structure of the organisation" in the last seventy years.

"It is not a constitutional body. It is not a statutory body. This setup almost has tantalising powers," he said. The CBI was set up under the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act.

Every time something happens at the state-level with political implications, people want the case to be referred to the CBI, forgetting that the agency also consists of human beings and they can make mistakes, he said.

"Every political party could work towards creating a proper statutory framework for the organisation," the retired judge added.

Earlier this year, Chelameswar was among the four senior judges of the Supreme Court who went public with their grievances about then Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra's style of functioning.

Asked about that unprecedented press conference, Chelameswar said going public was the only option available to them.

The press conference was the culmination of a series of events that started in November 2017, and the decision to go public was taken only after a letter written to then CJI did not yield results, he said.

"There was a lot of criticism over our going public. If there was any possibility of issues getting solved internally, why would any of us venture out," he said.

Asked about the possibility of the Supreme Court coming in the ambit of the Right to Information Act, he said judges already give reasoning for the legal decisions taken by them but there could be scope for bringing administrative decisions within the RTI purview.

Asked to comment on absconding businessman Vijay Mallya's lawyers contending in the UK court while opposing request for his extradition that conditions in Indian jails are bad, he said while Indian jails do not boast of "five-star facilities", certain prisoners do get five-star treatment.

He also said that he would not be joining any political party or contest polls.

"Some may think political appointments (for retired judges) are not right. But what has the civil society done about it? If the civil society thought of it as not right, they should have protested. That may not have stopped it (the appointments) but would have been a deterrent factor," he said.

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Ahmedabad (PTI): Six months after the AI-171 plane crash, the B J Medical College hostel complex in Ahmedabad stands as a haunting reminder, with its charred walls and burnt trees replacing the once lively chatter of students with an eerie stillness.

Scattered across the crash site are grim remnants of daily life - burnt cars and motorcycles, twisted beds and furniture, charred books, clothes and personal belongings.

The Atulyam-4 hostel building and the adjoining canteen complex stand abandoned, with entry strictly prohibited.

For residents near the site, memories of the incident still linger, casting a lasting shadow on their lives, with some of them saying they are still afraid to look up at the sky when an aircraft passes overhead.

On June 12, Air India flight AI-171, a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner bound for London, crashed moments after take-off from the Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport, killing 260 persons.

The aircraft slammed into the BJ Medical College hostel complex in Meghaninagar, turning a lively student neighbourhood into a landscape of ruin and grief.

 

"The area now lies very silent, only a few birds chirp here," Sanjaybhai, a security guard deployed at the premises by authorities to prevent trespassing, told PTI.

Mahendrasingh Jadeja, a general store owner whose shop is just 50 metres from the point where the aircraft struck, described it as an unimaginable calamity. "In all my years, I have never seen anything like this."

Pointing to a tree behind his shop, the 60-year-old said the aircraft first struck there before crashing into the hostel building.

"It was a scorching summer afternoon. Not many people were outside. When I heard a loud crashing sound, I ran out of my shop. We were all terrified," he recalled.

"Even today, we instinctively look up whenever a plane passes overhead," he added.

Another local, Manubhai Rajput, who lives barely 200 metres from the site, said he witnessed the horror unfold on June 12.

"The plane was flying unusually low. Before I could understand what was happening, there was thick black smoke and a deafening crash," he said.

For over three decades, Rajput and his neighbours lived close to the airport without giving much thought to the aircraft overhead.

"We never looked up at the sky. But that day is etched in my mind. The plane hit a tree first, and then there was a loud sound," he said.

Rajput recalled how hundreds of locals rushed to the site even before police, fire services or the Army arrived.

Tinaben, another resident of Meghaninagar, said she never imagined something like this could happen in Ahmedabad.

"Despite being close to the airport, this area always felt safe," she said.

As an aircraft roared overhead during the conversation, Tinaben paused, looked up nervously and said, "It's still scary."

A senior official of Civil Hospital Ahmedabad, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the state government has yet to decide what to do with the damaged site.

Currently, investigations are going on and the site is strictly prohibited for people, he added.