The Economic Times daily newspaper is available online now.

    Hathras stampede main accused arrested; police say he was recently contacted by political parties

    Synopsis

    Devprakash Madhukar, the main accused in the July 2 Hathras stampede that killed 121 people, has been arrested by the Special Operations Group of Hathras police. Madhukar worked as a fundraiser for events of self-styled godman Surajpal alias Narayan Sakar Hari alias Bhole Baba and collected donations. The police will apply for remand of Madhukar and are checking his financial transactions, money trails, and call detail records.

    **EDS: SCREENSHOT VIA PTI VIDEOS** Hathras: Prime accused of the Hathras stamped...PTI
    Hathras: Prime accused of the Hathras stampede case, Devprakash Madhukar, being brought by police to a hospital for medical examination, in Hathras.
    Devprakash Madhukar, the main accused in the July 2 Hathras stampede that killed 121 people, was arrested from Delhi's Najafgarh area by a Special Operations Group of Hathras police, officials said on Saturday. Madhukar, who was arrested late night on Friday, was contacted by some political parties recently, Hathras Superintendent of Police Nipun Agarwal said.

    Agarwal said Madhukar worked as a fundraiser for events of self-styled godman Surajpal alias Narayan Sakar Hari alias Bhole Baba and collected donations. The police will apply for remand of Madhukar, he said.

    "His financial transactions, money trails are being looked into, and call detail records also being checked," Agarwal added.

    However, on Friday night, Madhukar's lawyer A P Singh had claimed he had surrendered to the police in Delhi, where he had come for medical treatment.

    Around 2.15 pm on Saturday, Madhukar was brought by the police to the Bagla Combined District Hospital in Hathras for a medical examination amid heavy security deployment in and around the government hospital.

    Madhukar had his face covered with a handkerchief and a stole tied around his head.

    Madhukar, the 'mukhya sevadar' of the 'satsang' where the stampede occurred. He is the only accused named in the FIR lodged at Sikandra Rao police station in Hathras in connection with the incident.

    "Today, we have surrendered Devprakash Madhukar, who has been called the main organiser in the FIR in the Hathras case, after calling the police, the SIT and the STF in Delhi since he was undergoing treatment here," lawyer Singh claimed in a video Friday night.

    "We had promised we would not apply for anticipatory bail since we did no wrong. What is our crime? He is an engineer and a heart patient. Doctors said his condition is stable now and so we surrendered today to join the probe," the lawyer said.

    Singh said police may now record his statement or question him but they must take into consideration his health condition and ensure that "nothing wrong happens with him".

    "We did not do anything like filing anticipatory bail or moving court which would have been viewed as an effort to save ourselves and being scared... questions were being raised about his (Madhukar) whereabouts and if he had run away," he said.

    Madhukar will join the probe and share information about the "anti-social elements" at the event, he added.

    Uttar Pradesh Police had announced a reward of Rs 1 lakh for information leading to Madhukar's arrest.

    On July 3, the Supreme Court lawyer had claimed that he also represents Surajpal alias Narayan Sakar Hari alias Bhole Baba, the self-styled godman at whose 'satsang' the stampede occurred, and that some "anti-social elements" were behind the tragedy.

    Surajpal was ready to cooperate with the state administration and police and had sought an investigation into the entire matter, Singh had said.

    Till Thursday, six people, including two women volunteers, who were members of the organising committee of Bhole Baba's 'satsang', had been arrested in the case.

    An FIR was lodged in the matter on July 2 under Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) sections 105 (culpable homicide not amounting to murder), 110 (attempt to commit culpable homicide), 126 (2) (wrongful restraint), 223 (disobedience to order duly promulgated by the public servant) and 238 (causing disappearance of evidence).

    On July 3, the Uttar Pradesh government had formed a three-member judicial commission headed by a retired high court judge to probe the Hathras tragedy and to look into the possibility of a conspiracy behind the stampede.


    (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)

    (Catch all the Business News, Breaking News, Budget 2024 Events and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.)

    Subscribe to The Economic Times Prime and read the ET ePaper online.

    ...more
    The Economic Times

    Stories you might be interested in