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    Patna, April 18: Five days after ruling Janata Dal-United   (JD-U) legislator Bhagwan Singh Kushwaha was inducted into the Nitish Kumar   ministry, widows of three brothers in a Bihar village have questioned the   move. The three men were allegedly killed in a gun battle with the   police Aug 25, 2006 in Nawadaben village in Bhojpur district, 70 km from here.   Their widows have accused Kushwaha of plotting the murders and asserted that the   gun battle never took place. 
 They now fear they would be deprived of   justice with Kushwaha being made a minister.
 
 "This is shocking. When he   could engineer the killings as a mere legislator, he would easily influence the   cause of justice as a minister with more money and muscle power," said Rita   Devi, one of the women.
 
 "I have lost all hope of justice now," concurs   Sita Devi, the mother of the three brothers.
 
 A backward caste leader in   his 40s, Kushwaha is among 19 new faces inducted by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar   in his cabinet. He has been given the rural development portfolio.
 
 The   police allegedly gunned down the brothers, Ram, Lakshman and Bharat, claiming   they were criminals. Their family members and villagers have claimed that they   were not criminals and that the police killed them at Kushwaha's instance. The   legislator has denied this.
 
 Last year, the widows and other family   members staged a protest in New Delhi. They sought the intervention of National   Human Rights Commission and demanded a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI)   inquiry into the deaths. The government decided to recommend a CBI probe.
 
 The mother of the brothers fears the new minister could eliminate her   only surviving son, Satrughan Singh, who has been fighting a legal battle.
  (IANS)   (IANS) |   
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