MODUS
OPERANDI
of
the spies
7.
The brief of the plainclothes men and their hired thugs is to
i)
Stalk the Petitioner,
ii)
Carry out a slander campaign and poison the minds of the people with
whom the Petitioner has to deal with on personal or official business
and prejudice them against the Petitioner,
iii) Harass and unsettle him by unleashing the local antisocial
elements on him;
and
last but not least, and perhaps the most important brief of the
spies
iii)
Cook up evidence to support “the dementia hypothesis”.
a.
One of the immediate and nagging problem the Petitioner was
facing due to the activity of the spies was that his personal
belongings like house keys, vehicle keys, ATM cards and wallets and
such started going missing.
i)
The fact of the matter was that forgetfulness is one of the symptoms
of dementia and in order to prove that the Petitioner was forgetful
the spies have been ordered to get away with his personal belongings
at the slightest opportunity.
ii)
The most dramatic of these operations was on march 03, 2004 in the
Ernakulam junction railway station when the special branch CID of the
Kerala police whisked away his briefcase with the case files just
minutes before he was to present a case in the Hon'ble Court.
{
I reached the ernakulam jn railway station at around 10 am. The
court was to be in session by 1015 and i was desperately trying to
get into an auto to take me to the court in the taxi stand inside the
railway station compound just adjacent to the traffic police post. I
just turned round and looked back and found that my brief case with
the case files had disappeared. I looked round for the brief case to
no avail and decided that that i will go to the court and look for
the brief case later rather than risk being late in the court. The
whole drama was over in under fifteen minutes.
Presenting
the case was not a problem for it was all my own handiwork and it was
my own story. But I had my house keys inside the brief case. }
a)
The booty, the brief case was for once returned to the
Petitioner by the police after the hearing was over.
b)
The Petitioner's hunch is that the presiding judge had been
informed that the spies had the Petitioner's briefcase with the
case files in their “custody” as evidence of the fact that the
Petitioner was demented and forgetful and that was why the spies were
playing the “good Samaritan”.
{
Indeed the judge
asked me at the hearing whether I had the case files with me ! }
ii)
It was not an accident but a “security operation” by the spy
networks of the government, to hoodwink the judiciary into believing
that the Petitioner is demented.
iii)
Later developments in the Hon'ble Kerala High Court proved that the
spies had succeeded in their efforts. It was following this that the
Kerala High Court started denying the petitioner equality before
the law.
b.
The
Petitioner had a certain amount of personal charm and left alone
could get along with people famously. So the spy's strategy is
pre-emptive action. People are primed by the spies about the
Petitioner before they ever come across him.
i)
The plainclothes men, and their innumerable informers who live on the
offal, go around the place telling the people with whom the
Petitioner has to deal with on personal and/or official matters, as
well as the locals of the place where he is going to live and work,
that the Petitioner is insane - and more.
ii)
These labile individuals, primed by the propaganda and with their
preconceived notions, look for signs of insanity in the Petitioner
and “find” it in every word and deed of the Petitioner.
iii)
The result is that the reputation that the Petitioner has in the
general populace of Thiruvananthapuram is that of a raving lunatic.
iv)
Any body can do or say anything to the Petitioner and get away with
it for they know that there is not going to be any punitive action.
v)
Any complaints from the Petitioner can be passed off as further
evidence of insanity there by creating a vicious circle! The
policemen then ransack the Petitioner's personal domain with the
connivance of the obliging gentry of Thiruvananthapuram.
c.
The overt criminal activities of the spies directed at the
Petitioner are carried out by proxy through the obliging members of
the local population drawn from all strata of society, from the
hired thugs from the streets of Thiruvananthapuram to senior members
of officialdom and unscrupulous members of the professional classes.
i)
Many a time the spy's handymen are not regular offenders but are
drawn into crime by the spy's assurance of safe passage. Expecting no
retribution in view of the reassurances by the spy and the
helplessness of the Petitioner's situation these individuals and
groups take liberties with the Petitioner. The Petitioner perforce
has to retaliate and show them their place
ii)
Once these handymen get themselves implicated, it is in their
interests as well to see that the Petitioner is done for in order to
ensure that there is no chance of retaliation.
iii)
So these people perforce have to join the spy's band wagon and the
bandwagon starts to roll just like in the story of the goose with the
golden fleece.
a.)
A typical examples will be the medical doctors involved in the
procedure on the Petitioner in that dreadful night of February 2003
( cf.
Para 6. a.)
{
rest assured, as
long as i am alive these persons are not safe; and so,
gut me! }
b.)
The latest instance is of the builders who had stopped the house
construction in between with no reason whatsoever ( vide
Para 8. d.) and is being exposed in the consumer
disputes redressal forum. And as a last resort and as a face saving
exercise they have started mud-slinging.
iv)
The end result is the Petitioner's enemies multiplying in geometric
proportions.
f. The
policemen in plainclothes by means of their covert operations have
succeeded in creating a virtual atmosphere of terror around the
Petitioner.
i)
The Petitioner’s bed room, for all practical purposes, was being
transformed into a sort of police lock up. Many a nights in the past,
the Petitioner was not able to sleep in his own bed room in the
rented houses he was staying then because of the racket being created
outside by the plainclothesmen and their cronies and had to move
around like a zombie in the daytime. The Petitioner has in his
possession evidence in the form of a sound track recorded from
within the Petitioner's bed room in the awkward hours of the night
laced with pictures of the originators of the sound.
ii)
In the neighbourhood where the Petitioner lived his reputation is
that of a violent lunatic and he was living with all the stigma of
lunacy as it existed in primitive societies. In the streets of
Thiruvananthapuram city the Petitioner has gone through every thing
short of being stoned as a mad man.
iii)
Kind courtesy the embargo declared on the Petitioner by the spies
social and cultural life of any sort is impossible and, ostracised
and isolated, the Petitioner is living the life of a pariah.
d.
The Petitioner was in a teaching job and the effect of the smear
campaign of the spies on his professional career has been
disastrous.
i)
It was an extremely difficult situation for the Petitioner, teaching
seventeen year old youngsters to have the students told by none other
than the members of the teaching staff that this Petitioner, is an
imbecile.
ii)
In fact some time in 2001 while Prof. Dr. (Mrs.) K. V. Menon was the
Head of the Department of Physiology of Medical College, Trivandrum,
Mr. Rajasekharan an insurance agent and a complete stranger as far as
the Petitioner is concerned was sent to the Petitioner by the “madam”
to convey the message: “madam
paranju, sarinu manda budhiyannu” ( malayalam
meaning “madam told me that you are an idiot” ). That was by way
of rubbing salt into the Petitioner's wounds.
iii)
The Petitioner faced the situation with fortitude and could carry on
regardless thanks to the teenagers who did not take things in their
own hands as, perhaps, the propagandists expected of them.
iv)
A serious effort was on to deprive him of his job and only means of
lively hood in Medical College Trivandrum by the spies exerting
their clout on the higher ups in the medical education service.
v)
The Petitioner's stubborn resistance prevented the spies and their
stooges from succeeding in spite of the most inhuman and uncivilized
methods adopted to make the Petitioner bite the dust.
vi)
The spies had to stop the Petitioner from getting his post graduate
degree by hook or crook. The snag here was that if the Petitioner got
his MD the “dementia hypothesis” and the insanity theory would no
more hold water.
In
the vicious atmosphere in the dept. of physiology of Medical College,
Trivandrum it was just child's play for the trained spies of the
government.
e.
The hidden hand of this Indian secret police is obvious in:
i)
the sudden turn around of the Director of Medical Education, Kerala
in the question of the Petitioner's appointment as lecturer trainee
ii)
in the exemplary conduct of the Petitioner in 1995 turning to
“behaviour abnormality” in his confidential report for the very
next year 1996 .
iii)
the kerala high court denying him equality before the law ( vide
article 14, the constitution of india)
and
so on.
Chapter 8
P.S.
this is part of a petition that i am trying to prepare.
mostly i am cutting and pasting from old documents
and what is given will later undergo drastic changes.
some of the earlier parts have already been put on another blog
and is available at the link below
it is all coming from a wireless netconnection that has limitations