THE
WEEK
JUNE
20, 1993, pages 28-33
High
intrigue. Deadly power struggle in Puttaparthi
Intense
power struggle leads to spilling of blood in Puttaparthi ashram. But the
target of attack was not Satya Sai Baba, but his personal assistant. There was
jealousy, greed and a desperate desire to cover up misdeeds. And was one of
the boys shot by the police in cold blood? There are several other questions
which are as intriguing as the miracle man’s mystique.
1.
Assailants enter reception room on the ground floor, kill Radhakrishna
and Mahajan, wound two others and lock themselves in.
2.
Sai Baba wakes up, locks the door connecting the two wings on the first
floor and moves to a room on the far end of the eastern wing.
3.
Police use a ladder to climb up the first floor and break open the door
of Baba’s living room.
4.
Assailants run into the Baba’s bedroom and bolt the door. Police
force the door open and shoot them dead.
Why, Baba?
Suresh Prabhu,
35, drank a glass of water and left home a little after nine on that Sunday
night. He told his wife, Vineeta, to go to bed without waiting for him as he
would be returning late. Though Vineeta was used to spending her nights alone
at Puttaparthi’s Prashanti Nilayam, since her marine engineer husband was
often away on ships, June 6 was a particularly lonely night for her. Only the
previous day had her husband enrolled their three children in the ashram’s
boarding school. It was a decision that mystified her. For the school was
quite near their residence.
But Vineeta
was not one who would question her husband. She was all admiration for him,
and considered him a genius. They got married in 1981, the match-maker was
Satya Sai Baba, and they lived in the quarters allotted by their living god
along with Suresh’s aged farther Shantaram, a retired flight lieutenant. All
in the family had absolute faith in the Baba, and Suresh, doing volunteer work
while on leave from shipping company, was to be on guard duty at Prashanti
Mandir (the Baba’s abode in Prashanti Nilayam) that night.
The man who
chose guards for the night was Suresh’s elder brother Vijay Chandra Prabhu,
45, who was in charge of the Vocational Training Centre at the ashram. Besides
his brother, Vijay had drafted N. Jagannathan, the ashram’s stationery
supplier, and E.K. Suresh Kumar, a lanky Keralite educated in Malaysia before
he took his M.Com from Saty Sai Baba Institue of Higher Learning. They used to
hold frequent whisper sessions at the Vocational Training Centre and they
shared an intense dislike for Radhakrishna, the Baba’s personal assistant.
The young
Kumar had a close persoanl relationship with the Baba before Radhakrishna, 45,
replaced him in the Baba’s affections. Soon enough, Kumar lost his place in
the powerful inner circle, which controls access to the Baba and dispenses
favours. Vijay was apparently angry with Radhakrishna for accusing him of
embezzling Rs 1 lakh from the Vocational Training Centre. And Jagannathan
suspected that Radhakrishna was trying to scullte his stationery business with
Prashanti Nilayam and also the ashram at Whitefield near Bangalore. Mixed up
with them somehow was a thin, dark bespectacled young man called K. Sairam.
Son of V. Krishan Murthy, a staunch Sai Baba devotee living in Bangalore.
Sairam was a M.Com student of the ashram.
Most of the
lights had been switched off by the time Suresh Prabhu reported for guard duty
at Prashanti Mandir. Sai Baba, 67, had gone through his evening routine,
having given the public darshan and afterwards a private audience to a handful
of important devotees in the reception room on the ground floor of the two
storey building. And he had retired to his bedroom, climbing up the wooden
stairs, after a simple dinner. The bedroom had just a cot, a picture of Shirdi
Sai Baba and a dressing table.
Outside, the
vast ground where hundreds of devotees waited every morning and evening for
his darshan, had fallen silent. On this night there were 500 of them and Sai
Seva Dal volunteers, with sticks in hand, strolled around in the complex to
keep watch against petty thefts. Soon they would unroll their bedding on the
verandah.
Vijay Prabhu
had posted his brother, Kumar and Jagannathan along the main hall and they had
knives and daggers concealed in their bedding. The assault was mounted around
10 p.m. when the trio walked along the verandah, switched off the remaining
lights and rang the doorbell of the reception room.
Inside the
room were lecturer Sai Kumar Mahajan, the Baba’s cook Vishnu Bhatt, and a
student called Anil Paitley. So too, perhaps, was Sairam. The trio had no
problem entering the room and they said they had brought a telegram for the
Baba from godman Chandraswamy. It was then that Radhakrishna, who was in the
Baba’s suite on the first floor, came down and was immediately stabbed to
death. Mahajan, too, was killed in the scuffle and Vishnu Bhatt and Paitley
lay wounded.
The assailants
swiftly bolted the door of the reception room but a young boy in the vicinity
who witnessed the stabbing ran behind the room, throwing open the door that
led to the veranda. His screams woke up devotees whoe were sleeping in
adjacent rooms and they rushed to the spot. Suddenly, the assailants shouted
from within the room that they were trying to save the Baba from Kashmiri
terrorists who were tryint to kidnap him. That was red-herring thrown to
confuse the crowd.
The commotion
woke up the Baba, who pressed an alarm button which sent everyone in the
complex scurrying out of bed and switched on the floodlights. Anxious students
shinned up the pillars of the building and landed on the first floor. There
they saw the Baba heading for a room at the far end of the hall on the eastern
wing, after locking a door connecting the two wings.
The siren
brought in throngs of devotees and villagers who, armed with broomsticks and
sticks, surrounded the building. Among them was Suresh Prabhu’s father, who
ironically did not know his son was among the hunted. Realising that they were
outnumbered, the assailants ran up the stairs and locked themselves in the
Baba’s living room. Hot on the heels were the devotees who banged on the
door. Still the assailants tried to outwit them by claiming "we have come
to protect the Baba as some people are coming to attack him." Confusion
reigned supreme till some devotees who had seen the assailants downstairs
confirmed that the men in the room were the killers.
Suddenly,
police were on the scene, perhaps alterted by the Baba’s brother ("I
went to the police station and brought them here," said Janakiramalah) or
on hearing the shouts (as claimed by Circle Inspector K.N. Gangadhar Reddy).
Using a ladder, the plicemen entered the first floor and broke the door.
"We tried
to make them surrender but in vain," said the inspector. "So we
broke open the door and two of them charged at us with daggers. When we tried
to catch them, they escaped into the next room." It was the Baba’s
bedroom and all the four, including Sairam, were shot dead there.
The police
faced flak for shooting them down and, in effect, preempting confessions.
While some investigating officers admitted that the reaction was knee-jerk,
eyewitnesses claimed that the killing of the young Sairam was in cold blood. A
police officer, too, pointed to the possibility that Sairam could have chased
the killers into th eBaba’s room but got locked with them and was killed by
the police.
Expelled from
the college twice for misconduct, Sairam had been readmitted at the Baba’s
instance and had always been faithful to the Baba. His house in Bangalore is
full of photographs of him with the Baba, sharing a podium with him, falling
at his feet holding his hand, and so on. "I cannot believe that my son
would ever have tried to kill his god," said Saroja, running her hands
over the pot containing his ashes.
"Could
the police not have shot to disarm them instead of killing them," asked
Sairam’s anguished father in Bangalore pointing out that the assailants had
no guns. Even as the assailants had no guns. Even as the assailants were
pacing up and down the locked room, some trustees encouraged the policemen to
shoot them down. Said a police officer: "There was no competent senior
officer. Someone with presence of mind would not have reacted like that. They
just became trigger-happy."
But there was
also the possibility of the police men mistaking the assailants for Naxalites,
who prowl the Penokonda taluk, and not taking chances, said another officer.
Besides, if the assailants had escaped and harmed the Baba, the necks of the
policemen would have been on the block.
Some residents
of the ashram, however, insisted that the shots were heard quite some time
after the police entered the Baba’s room. And there were reports of the
police arriving on the scene twice. Did they return to the station after
disarming the assailants and rush back to the spot with orders to silence the
assailants?
Surprisingly,
authorities at Prashanti Nilayam chose not to lodge a formal police complaint
on the incident. But he told Police Commissioner of Hyderabad, J. Dora, a
devotee of his, that it was a case of eersha dvesham (Telugu for act
done out of jealousy).
The exitement
caused by the attack and the seizure of potassium cyanide from the assailants
mounted the next day when explosives were found in the Vocational Training
Centre. However, teh kingpin in the conspiracy, Vijay Prabhu, had fled the
coop.
Investigating
officers were convinced that the assailants had no intention to harm the Baba.
Had they wanted to harm him they would have rushed straight to his room
instead of hanging around in the reception room till the crowds gathered.
"Their target undoubtedly was Radhakrishna. Functioning as the eyes and
ears of the Baba, he had also made himself unpopular with several members of
the trust that controls the many institutions set up in the name of the Baba
the world over.
In fact, the
trustees were themselves engaged in a faction feud. One faction was led by the
Baba’s brother Janakiramaiah and the other by col. Joga Rao and Narayan, the
trust secretary. (The othter trustees are K.R. Prasad and the rajmata of
Bangalore, Indular Shah of Bombay and Sreenivasan of Madras. The Baba is the
chairman.) Some of them have been collecting large sums and also gold and
where there is money there is funny business. The surmise is taht Radhakrishna
had been passing on vital information to the Baba about serious financial
fiddles.
One man who
was annoyed by the suggestion that the assailants never wanted to harm the
Baba was Janakiramaiah. "If they did not want that why did they rush to
his room with knives?" he asked angrily. However, Andhra Pradesh
Director-General of Police, T. Suryananrayanan Rao said, "we have a
feeling that there was no attempt on the Baba’s life, only on that of the
others. There are some groups in the ashram and there is unhappiness between
them."
That there was
disgruntlement in the ashram was obvious. Many disciples of the Baba were
appalled by the domineering attitude of the governing members. There was also
a growing feeling that the Baba was not recognising the devotion of those who
had been with him for decades. Many of his devotees were dependent on him
materially as well as spiritually, they having quit their jobs to serve him.
It is them that the lack of recognition would hurt most.
For a week,
the attack in Prahanti Nilayam kept every tongue wagging. The theories thrown
up by the authorities ranged from reasonable to the ridiculous.
‘Naxalites’ was one spontaneous cry but it was muffled soon enough.
Another theory about a sinister Hindutva conncetion, seen in the assailants
escorting Vishwa Hindu Parishad generela secretary Ashok Singhal during a
visit to the ashram, raised much more promise before teh authorities
discounted it. Why, there was even talk about a Dawood Ibrahim plot to do in
the Baba.
And the Baba
kept on smiling, distributing the sweets, but refusing to enlighten the public
about the motive of the attack. "Only Baba knowns what really happened on
that night," says Vineeta. "After all, he is our god."
- M.D. Riti in
Puttaparthi and Bangalore with Stanley Theodore in Hyderabad.
Pictures
The key
players. (top) Vajay Prabha, Suresh Prabhu and Suresh Kumar; Janakiramalah
points to the room where Radhakrishna was killed (above), the killers’
weapons; Circle Inspector Gangadhar Reddy.
Mystery
deepening thanks to silence.
Hero’s
farewell, Radhakrishna’s funeral procession.
Frames
A
global network
Dreamy eyed
Satyanarayana Raju flung away his school books one morning. His father picked
up a cane and fumed: "Who do you thing you are?" The boy scooped up
a handful of jasmine flowers and threw them on the ground. They formed the
words ‘Sai Baba’ in Telugu.
Then he left
the house and squatted on a rock a little distance away. People who flocked to
him were given flowers and sugar candy, which he apparently took from the air.
More than 50
years later, people still flock to his dark round face with a halo of springy
hair. He has 30 million followers and an organisation that has roots in more
than a hundred countries.
Puttaprthi in
Anantapur district of Andhra Pradesh was a mere cluster of mud huts when Sai
Baba moved in there half a century ago. There were hardl 50 people. Today it
is a teeming township. Sai Baba had worked miracle and made it an educational
centre.
First a high
school was founded. Then a college. A university, the Sri Satya Sai Institute
of Higher lerarning, was set up in 1981. Affiliated to it are womens’
colleges in Anantapur, Jaipur an Bhopal and a men’s college in Whitefield
near Bangalore.
Teh
globalheadquarters of the Sri Saty Sai Trust, Puttaparthi has a
super-specialty hospital buot at a cost of Rs 1 crore, a helipad, a
planetarium, a spiritual museum, a sprawling auditorium and three-storey
apartment blocks for devotees.
Although the
organisation has more than 15,000 centres all over the world, including two in
Russia and one in Iran, there is no hundi system in any of them. Donations
have to be made directly to the bank accounts of the trusts. And it is big
money.
-
Jahashree Ramamohan
Pall
of despair
The bodies of
Radhakrishna and Sai Kumar Mahajan were carried in reverence to their resting
places, borne high on the shoulders of fellow devotees of Prashanti Nilayam.
The body of Jagannathan was buried quietly in Penukonda village. His brother
Kodandaram says that he cannot even find the grave.
In Bangalore,
V. Krishna Murthy had swung between hope and despair for many hours. When he
frantically contacted the hostel authoriteis at Puttaparthi to find out
whether his son Sairam had been killed or not, no one would tell him anything.
When he called the police station, he was told that no information could be
given to him over the phone; he would have to come there in person.
Krishna Murthy
read about his son’s death in an evening newspaper in Bangalore half a day
after the incident. Jagannathan’s family learnt abotu his death only after
the body was buried.
But no one
blames the Baba. "This can never affect my relationship with swami,"
says Krishna Murthy. Suresh Prabhu’s aged father has a busy routine in the
ashram as ever. And tears in Vineeta’s eyes do not dim her devotion to the
Baba. She says: "I am eternally his disciple."
- MRD
A
plethora of possibilities
ARM-chair
detectives had an ideal opportunity to exercise their grey cells when blood
flowed in Prashanti Nilayam. They threw up several theories, mostly off the
mark and some plausible. Here is a sampling.
Naxalites
did it
The
assaillants were backed by Naxalites, who have some strenght in Panukonda
taluk. Puttaparthi falls in Penukonda. The surmise is based on the discovery
of explosives at Vijay Prabhu’s Vocational Training Centre.
Probability:
Very low. DGP Suryanarayana Rao, too, does not see an Naxalite connection.
Handiwork
of jobless
The assailants
were denied jobs and in anger they tried to kill the Baba. The main proponent
of this theory is the Baba’s brother, Janakiramaiah.
Probability:
Low. Only Suresh Kumar had no job. The Prabhu brothers were well-employed.
For love
Suresh Kumar
was jealous of Radhakrishna, who had become the Baba’s new favorite.
Probability:
High, but in combination with the material gains theory.
For money
or power
The assailants
did it fo rmaterial gains.
Probability:
High, in combination with the jealousy theory.
Power
struggle
Factions in
the ashram fight for control over the vast empre and the finances.
Probability:
Very high, combined with the material gains theory.
RSS hand
RSS
masterminded the attack. The assailants escorted Ashok Singhal during his
visit to the ashram.
Probability:
Very low.
- MRD