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Noose tightens around naval chief's kin

Investigations into the naval war room leak case took a new turn on Friday with the Central Bureau of Investigation moving the External Affairs Ministry for revoking the passport of Ravi Shankar.

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NEW DELHI: Investigations into the naval war room leak case took a new turn on Friday with the Central Bureau of Investigation moving the External Affairs Ministry for revoking the passport of Ravi Shankaran, a kin of Navy chief Arun Prakash, in a bid to pave the way for his deportation from London.
    
Shankaran is wanted by the CBI for questioning and the agency has moved for issuance of a non-bailable arrest warrant against him from the designated court, CBI sources said here.
    
The CBI moved the External Affairs Ministry and the court after Shankaran did not appear before it despite several notices served at his office and residence in Mumbai seeking his appearance for questioning in the case, the sources said.
    
Once the passport is revoked, the CBI will also move for issuance of an Interpol red corner notice against him so that he can be nabbed anywhere, the sources said.
    
Shankaran's office Shanks Oceangraphic Private Limited in Mumbai and the office of Jeniffer Mirza, who was allegedly heading his front organistion in Goa, was raided by the CBI during which documents were recovered.
    
Former naval commander Kulbushan Parashar, already arrested by the CBI, had told the investigators that he had met Shankaran in London. Parashar was arrested by the CBI on April 6, when he returned from the United Kingdom.
 
In a related development, the CBI, along with defence experts, is analysing the another pendrive, handed over by the naval officers at its Hyderabad-based laboratory to ascertain whether material had been deleted from it and the nature of documents that had been copied on it.
 
CBI sources have alleged that a retired wing commander of the Indian Air Force Sambhaji R Surve had been instrumental in leaking several documents from the navy war room when he was on deputation there.
 
Surve's financial transactions were also being scrutinized by the CBI after his all bank accounts were frozen. The bank accounts of Shankaran had also been frozen by the
investigating agency.
    
The CBI had registered a case on March 20 against Surve, Shankaran, ex-commanders of Navy Vinod Kumar Jha and Vinod Rana, Raj Rani Jaiswal, who allegedly acted as a honey trap for the defence personnel, Mukesh Bajaj, Wing Cdr (retd) S K Kohli, Kashyap Kumar and former naval commander Kulbushan Parashar.
 
While Surve, Jha, Rana, Parashar, Jaiswal and Bajaj had been arrested by the CBI, Kohli and Parashar had joined the investigation and were cooperating with the probe agency in the case.
    
The case against all the nine persons has been registered under various Sections of Official Secrets Act and 120-B (criminal conspiracy) of the Indian Penal Code.
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