Sunday, December 23, 2018

Prez commutes death sentence of four Bihar massacre convicts (Bihar)

Updated: Jan 22, 2017 16:03 IST
HT Correspondent and PTI 
New Delhi/Patna

The Bara massacre near Gaya, in which 34 upper caste men were killed on February 13, 1992, highlighted the deep rooted caste bias in the state.

In a rare gesture, President Pranab Mukherjee has set aside Union home ministry’s recommendation and commuted the death sentence of four persons convicted of killing of 34 upper caste people at Bihar’s Bara village, near Gaya, in 1992. The President gave a new lease of life on the New Year day to Krishna Mochi, Nanhe Lal Mochi, Bir Kuer Paswan and Dharmendra Singh alias Dharu Singh, by commuting their death sentence to life imprisonment.

The four were awarded death sentence on April 8, 2001 by a sessions court at Gaya in connection with the Bara massacre. On April 15, 2002, the Supreme Court confirmed their death sentence in a majority judgment of 2:1, with justice MB Shah dissenting against such an award. Members of erstwhile Maoist Communist Centre had allegedly killed 34 Bhumihars (a landed upper caste) at Bara village on February 13, 1992. The Union home ministry, based on the recommendations of the Bihar government, had recommended on August 8, 2016 that the mercy petition of all the four be rejected.

Pranab Mukherjee
However, the President took into consideration various facts relating to the case, including the delay in handing over the mercy petitions of the four accused by the state government and the observations made by the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC). The NHRC, in its order last year, had said after an “analysis of the facts and materials placed before the Commission, it emerges that the four convicts in question had submitted their mercy petitions prior to July 7,2004.” “This is clear from the admission of the inspector general (prisons and correctional services), government of Bihar that the mercy petitions of the four convicts were forwarded to the secretariat of Hon’ble President of India through the home department, government of Bihar vide letter dated July 7, 2004.”

However, the mercy petitions neither reached the home ministry, nor the President’s secretariat. It was only after the intervention of the NHRC that these were processed after 12 years.

Source: https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/prez-commutes-death-sentence-of-four-bihar-massacre-convicts/story-ZVSvwtwXpbmNAayBRDwLZJ.html (Accessed 23 December 2018)

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