Army tribunal dumps Ketchup Colonel's plea

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July 08, 2010 13:35 IST

Colonel (retired) H S Kohli, sacked from the Army for faking encounters during counter insurgency operations in North East in 2003, suffered a setback on Thursday when the Armed Forces Tribunal rejected his review petition.

Kohli's counsel Dil Jit Singh had earlier contended that the defence ministry's decision-making process in the case was contrary to the decision taken by the authorities concerned.

Colonel Kohli, commanding officer of an artillery regiment in Assam, had taken photographs of civilians splashed with tomato ketchup posing as corpses and gave them to his seniors to stake claim for gallantry award.

The incident took place at Bada Nagadun near Silchar in Assam in 2003 and Kohli was dismissed from the Army in November 2004 after a court martial found him guilty.

His modus operandi prompted media to dub him as 'ketchup colonel'. Later on it emerged that Kohli had followed orders from his superior Brig S S Rao, who said he was taking directions from his superiors.

According to Singh, during the court martial, Kohli was offered a plea bargain to plead guilty and he would be given a minor punishment but later on he was dismissed from service. 

Singh claimed that the ministry notings on Kohli's dismissal orders show that the under secretary concerned had recommended commuting his sentence, which was accepted by the joint secretary, who was the competent authority.

"But fearing media backlash if Kohli was reinstated, the joint secretary sent it to higher ups, who stuck to the dismissal order," he claimed.
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