SPEED LETTER delivered “late”
of Afzal Guru:-
How the letter got delayed ???
Read this :-
When the clerk at the 24-hour Speed Post booking counter at the
Bhai Veer Singh Mark post office near Gole Market in Delhi got an envelope from
the Superintendent of Tihar Jail No. 3 just after Thursday midnight, he took it
as a “normal letter,” for he was not told that it carried information about the
hanging of Afzal Guru.
He issued a booking receipt at
12.04 a.m. and kept it with other mail to be sent to Jammu and Kashmir on
Friday, the day before the execution of the Parliament attack case convict. The
India Post bundle carrying the letter from the jail reached the airport after
7.30 a.m. But by the time the formalities could be completed, the flight had
left for Srinagar.
“Normally, it takes at least four
to five hours to complete the formalities for Speed Post parcels to Jammu and
Kashmir, such as security checks and issue of delivery bills. As the last
flight that carries mail to Srinagar left at 11.30 a.m., the letter was
scheduled to be despatched only on Saturday, the day Afzal was hanged. Had the
Tihar Jail authorities told us about the special delivery, we would have
ensured that the letter was delivered before or on Saturday,” a senior
Department of Posts official told The Hindu.
It was only when news of Afzal
Guru’s hanging started flashing on news channels on Saturday morning and his
family said that they had not received any letter, as claimed by Union Home
Minister Sushilkumar Shinde, that senior postal officials swung into action,
reportedly on enquiry by Union Communications Minister Kapil Sibal, in charge
of the department.
However, the mail could be traced
only after it reached Srinagar after 11.30 a.m. on Saturday. But India Post
officials could not do anything that day as Srinagar and most parts of the
Kashmir Valley, including Afzal’s hometown, Sopore, was under curfew. And the
next day being Sunday and major cities still under curfew, the letter remained
in Srinagar.
It was only on the morning of
Monday that special arrangements were made to get the letter delivered.
Finally, around 11 a.m., Afzal’s wife, Tabassum, got the letter at her
residence in Jageer, 6 km from Sopore, telling what she and her family
already knew.
//The
Hindu//
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