Showing posts with label Nagpur Central Prison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nagpur Central Prison. Show all posts

Friday, February 6, 2015

Supreme Court stays Yakub Memon's execution in 1993 blasts case

Swati Deshpande, TNN | Dec 11, 2014, 02.54AM IST

MUMBAI: In a relief to Yakub Memon, the lone death row convict in the March 12, 1993 Mumbai serial blasts case, the Supreme Court on Wednesday issued notice to the CBI in a review plea he filed and stayed his hanging. Yakub Memon, younger brother of the absconding blasts mastermind Tiger Memon, has been in custody for almost two decades and is at present lodged in Nagpur prison. 

A bench of three judges headed by Justice AR Dave and comprising Justices J Chelameswar and Kurian Joseph granted relief to Memon, whose death sentence the President of India had upheld earlier this year. Memon moved the SC again with a review petition against the death penalty. The SC three-judge bench posted it for hearing on January 28, 2015. "It is directed that death penalty shall not be executed till the pendency of the review petition," the judges said. Earlier on June 2, the vacation bench of the SC had stayed Memon's execution and asked that his review be listed for hearing.


Memon's case is that the courts have not given any special reasons for sending him to the gallows. The designated trial court under the repealed Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act had in 2006 held him guilty of criminal conspiracy and financing air tickets to send co-conspirators for arms and RDX training to Pakistan. The conviction was based almost entirely on retracted confessions of the approvers and other co-accused. 

The SC, in its 2013 judgment upholding the death sentence, had observed that "A-1 (Yakub Memon) assumed the role of Tiger Memon in India during his absence." Memon's case in the review plea is that the apex court does not refer to any independent evidence to show his role in the actual terrorist activities in the planning and execution stages. 

Memon, who sources said is not keeping good health and is under medication in Nagpur jail, has sought commutation of the death penalty also on the grounds that he cannot be punished twice for the same offence since he has already served 20 years in prison.


Yakub Memon, younger brother of the absconding blasts mastermind Tiger Memon, has been in custody for almost two decades and is at present lodged in Nagpur prison. A chartered accountant, Memon has been in solitary confinement in a separate cell in Nagpur jail since his conviction in 2006. Prior to that, during trial, he was in Mumbai's Arthur Road jail since his return to India with his family to surrender in 1994. Neither Yakub nor any other member of his family confessed in the case. A constitution bench had earlier said a review plea must be given a hearing in an open court, and Memon sought just that. 

Over 250 people died and more than 700 were injured in the blasts. Yakub's parents, his three brothers and sister-in-law had returned to India with him and were all tried. While his wife, mother and brother Suleiman were acquitted, Yakub, two brothers Essa and Yusuf and sister-in-law Rubeena were convicted and sentenced.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Supreme-Court-stays-Yakub-Memons-execution-in-1993-blasts-case/articleshow/45464270.cms [last accessed 06.02.2015]

Man gets death for raping, killing 4-yr-old

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Wednesday sent a 47-year-old man to the gallows for luring a 4-year-old girl with the promise of buying her chocolates, brutally assaulting her sexually and then murdering her by using two heavy stones to crush her skull when she was writhing in pain after the perverted act. 

The convict was a neighbour of the victim who called him uncle like other children in the residential area under Wadi police station of Nagpur. He lured away the girl on April 3, 2008. The girl's battered and sexually assaulted body was discovered the next day by police at the instance of the accused after his arrest. 

He was convicted based on 'last seen theory' corroborated by several independent witnesses. The trial court on February 23, 2012 awarded death penalty finding the crime falling within the parameters for 'rarest of the rare' category. It also found no mitigating circumstances in favour of the convict, an exercise mandated by the SC in Machhi Singh case. 




Affirming the conviction and sentence last year, the Nagpur Bench of Bombay High Court said: "The accused raped a 4-year-old girl and thereafter battered and smashed her head by two heavy stones and killed her... Battering the head of the girl of tender age was done by the accused with extreme cruelty." The accused, Vasanta Sampat Dupare, appealed against the judgment in SC. Given the recent trend of extreme caution adopted by the apex court in awarding death penalty even in brutal murder cases, a 3-judge bench of Justices Dipak Misra, R F Nariman and U U Lalit made a fresh scrutiny of the evidence presented by the prosecution during the trial against Dupare, who was also a history-sheeter with four criminal cases pending against him. Writing the judgment for the bench, Justice Misra said: "This case deserves to fall in the category of rarest of rare cases. It is inconceivable from the perspective of society that a married man aged about two scores and seven make a four-year minor innocent girl child the prey of his lust and deliberately cause her death." 

The bench said the child trusted the man because of his acquaintance with her family and the socially ingrained trust attached to such proximity with elders. "This (rape and murder) is not only betrayal of an individual trust but destruction and devastation of the social trust. It is perversity in its enormity. It irrefragably invites the extreme abhorrence and indignation of the collective," it said and upheld award of death penalty. The court said taking into account Dupare's age, his appalling cruelty towards the minor girl was 'extremely shocking'. "It was not committed under any mental stress or emotional disturbance and it is difficult to comprehend that he would not commit such acts and would be reformed and rehabilitated." 

"The barbaric act of the appellant does not remotely show any concern for the precious life of a minor child who had not seen life. The criminality of the conduct of the appellant is not only depraved and debased, but can have a menacing effect on the society," it said. "As the circumstances would graphically depict, he would remain a menace to the society, for a defenseless child has become his prey. In our consideration, there are no mitigating circumstances," the court said. 

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Man-gets-death-for-raping-killing-4-yr-old/articleshow/45290629.cms [last accessed 06.02.2015]

Monday, April 15, 2013

Yakub Memon awarded masters in English Lit



Yakub Memon, the lone convict in the 1993 Mumbai blasts case whose death sentence has been confirmed by the Supreme Court, has been awarded a master’s degree in English Literature by Indira Gandhi National Open University.

Memon, who is now in Nagpur Central Prison, and his seven fellow prisoners were awarded the degrees at a convocation held here Friday. But Memon could not attend the convocation as police refused him permission. IGNOU Regional Director Dr Shivswaroop said that if permitted, he would personally hand over the certificate to Memon.

Source: http://m.indianexpress.com/news/yakub-memon-awarded-masters-in-english-lit/1102186/
accessed on 15th April 2013