Kannur:CPI(M) leader P P Divya, accused in the Kannur Additional District Magistrate Naveen Babu suicide case, was taken into custody on Tuesday by the Kerala police, hours after a court rejected her anticipatory bail plea. "She has been taken into custody," Kannur City Police Commissioner Ajit Kumar told reporters here. Divya has been charged with abetment to suicide in the case.
Earlier in the day, the Principal District and Sessions Judge, Thalassery, K T Nissar Ahammed rejected Divya's anticipatory bail plea. Attending his send-off function allegedly uninvited on October 14, Divya had criticised Babu for delaying approval for a petrol pump in Chengalai for several months and remarked he had okayed it only two days after being transferred, hinting she knew the reasons behind the sudden approval.
The following day, Babu was found dead at his quarters in Kannur. Responding to queries regarding the alleged delay in taking Divya into custody despite a case being registered against her in connection with the suicide, the Commissioner said, "we did not intervene in a matter that was under active judicial consideration."
He added there was a 38-page order, and based on it, "as soon as the anticipatory bail application was rejected, we sent our team to locate the accused and, in the process, took her into custody." The court rejected the anticipatory bail plea of Divya, observing that "the circumstances itself disentitle her the relief of pre-arrest bail."
In its order, the court, referring to various judgements of the Supreme Court and High Court, observed that the act of the petitioner (Divya) is a pre-planned and premeditated one with the sole intention of insulting and humiliating a highly reputed high ranking government official.
"As submitted by the learned public prosecutor, if such a person is granted the relief of pre-arrest bail, definitely it may give a wrong message to the society. By considering her political power, one can presume that there is every possibility of influencing the witnesses by using her influence," the court said.