Showing posts with label Surinder Koli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Surinder Koli. Show all posts

Thursday, December 20, 2018

Nithari accused Surinder Koli gets death penalty in sixth case (Uttar Pradesh)

Oct 07, 2016 16:46 IST
Hindustan Times

A Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) court in Ghaziabad on Friday awarded the death penalty to Surinder Koli in the sixth case related to the Nithari killings.

The killings were discovered in 2006 when dismembered bodies of children and women were found dumped around the Sector 31 house of Koli’s employer, Moninder Singh Pandher, in Noida. The sixth case relates to a 25-year-old domestic help from Nithari in Noida, who hailed from Nepal and had served as a domestic help at Pandher’s house before she disappeared on October 31, 2006. Koli has also been awarded the death penalty in five other cases decided earlier at Ghaziabad.

According to the charge-sheet filed by CBI, the women had stopped working at Pandher’s house in August 2006 as she was in an advanced stage of pregnancy. A day before the woman disappeared, Koli had called her outside the house and asked her to rejoin work. On October 31, 2006, she left her house at 7am and told her husband that after her work, she would go to Pandher’s house to meet Koli as he had offered her to resume work there. She never came back. Following a search, her husband and brother-in-law went to meet Koli, who told them that the woman did not come to their house.

Surinder Koli (L), accused in the Nithari serial killings, was on Friday sentenced to death by a special Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) court. (Hindustan Times/ File Photo)
After human skulls, bones, clothes and other remains were discovered from a closed gallery behind Pandher’s house at D5, sector 31 Noida, the woman’s husband identified her salwar. A skull superimposition test also identified the victim as the 25-year-old domestic help. The hearing in this case started in 2013 and Koli was held guilty after the prosecution produced 50 witnesses. Koli was held guilty of abduction, rape, murder and destruction of evidence. Koli and Pandher were arrested in December 2006. In January 2015, the Allahabad high court commuted Koli’s sentence to life imprisonment in one case. He is lodged in Dasna jail in Ghaziabad since December 2006.

Source: https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/nithari-accused-surinder-koli-gets-death-penalty-in-sixth-case/story-0eDwFJdqvzuU9Gpm9XWzpO.html (Accessed 20 December 2018)

Friday, February 6, 2015

High Court stays execution of Surinder Koli's death sentence

Friday, 31 October 2014 - 8:50pm IST | Place: Mumbai | Agency: PTI

The Allahabad High Court today stayed the execution of the death sentence of Surinder Koli in the gruesome Nithari serial killings case. A division bench comprising Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud and Justice P KS Baghel passed the order on a Public Interest Litigation filed by NGO People's Union for Democratic Rights (PUDR) and fixed November 25 as the next date of hearing in the matter.

The court also asked the Centre and the Uttar Pradesh government to file their counter affidavits by the next date of hearing. The High Court order comes two days after the Supreme Court rejected Koli's plea to recall the death sentence which was awarded to him by a special CBI court in February, 2009. In the PIL, PUDR has contended that Koli deserved "mercy on humanitarian ground" since he has suffered "mental torment" during the more than five-year-long period for which he has languished his jail awaiting verdicts on his numerous appeals and mercy petitions.

Koli, who worked as a domestic servant at the house of Noida-based businessman Moninder Singh Pandher, is facing the gallows for the murder of a 14-year-old girl Rimpa Haldar. Both Koli and Pandher had been awarded death sentence in the Rimpa Haldar case though the latter was acquitted later by the Allahabad High Court. Pandher, who had been held guilty by the trial court along with Koli in a number of other related cases also, was recently released on bail.

The killings came to light in December, 2006 when several residents of the Nithari village, located close to Pandher's bungalow in Sector 31 of Noida, approached the police with complaints of their children, mostly minor girls, having gone missing. During investigations, a number of skeletons were exhumed from near the house. Following an outcry over alleged inept handling of the case by Uttar Pradesh police, the case was handed over to the CBI in January, 2007.

After his death sentence in the Rimpa Haldar case was upheld by the Allahabad High Court vide the very order whereby Pandher was acquitted, Koli's subsequent appeal before the Supreme Court was turned down while his mercy petition was rejected by the President. The trial court, thereafter, issued a death warrant on September 02 this year fixing September 12 as the date of hanging but the execution was stayed by the Supreme Court which decided to hear his recall petition in an open court. However, on October 28, the Supreme Court dismissed the recall application, clearing the decks for execution of the death warrant. 

Source: http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report-high-court-stays-execution-of-surinder-koli-s-death-sentence-2031015 [last accessed 06.02.2015]

Why We Should Not Hang Surinder Koli

By Dilip D’Souza | Grist Media – Mon 27 Oct, 2014
The Supreme Court will hear Surinder Koli’s final plea in one of the Nithari murders cases this week, failing which he will be executed. His death will ensure that the rest of the Nithari cases will forever remain a blur. There remain several holes in the investigation against him that raise serious doubts about his guilt, but are we willing to listen?

A man may be executed, perhaps in as soon as a few days, for some pretty ghastly crimes. Why should this matter to you, you ask. He committed them, he was tried and found guilty, he's been sentenced, let him fry! Or hang. But what if I told you a few things:
* He was accused in over a dozen cases of murder. Only one trial has actually been completed as well as confirmed by the High Court – the one in which he was sentenced to death. That is, legally he has only ever been sentenced for one murder (see note below). Yet when his appeal against his sentence went to the Supreme Court and was denied, the judgeswrote: “The appellant appears to be a serial killer.” One murder, and he's a serial killer?

* The whole case against the man rests on his confession made to the
police after two months in custody, during which, he says in the confession, he was severely tortured.Section 24 of the Indian Evidence Act says such confessions are inadmissible in a trial.

* A doctor who examined the dead bodies remarked on how they were missing their torsos, how they were sliced with "surgical precision," and strongly suggested that there was an alternative explanation for these killings: an organ trade racket.

Should we let him hang, still? Or is that certainty marred by a few tiny cracks?

A quick recap might be in order: The man we're talking about is Surinder Koli, and the cases we're talking about are the infamous Nithari murders, with their gruesome rumors of mutilation, necrophilia and cannibalism. Koli was the domestic servant in Moninder Singh Pandher's home in Nithari village, Noida. Children and young women had been disappearing in the area for months, their families registering complaints with the police starting in 2005. In late 2006, the police arrested Koli as a suspect in the disappearance of a girl. He eventually confessed to the murder, saying he hadchopped her body into pieces and flung them behind Pandher's house into a drain there. When he took the police there, they found several skulls, bones, slippers and items of clothing, and also recovered two knives from Pandher's house.

The police framed charges against Koli and Pandher. In February 2009, the trial court in Ghaziabad sentenced both men to death for the murder of a girl called Rimpa Haldar. In September that year, the Allahabad High Court allowed Pandher's appeal against his death sentence, thus setting aside his death sentence. But it dismissed Koli's appeal. In February 2011, the Supreme Court too dismissed Koli's appeal, saying "no mercy can be shown" to him. Various other avenues to overturn Koli's death sentence have also been explored, with no success. This week, the Supreme Court will hear one final plea to review certain aspects of his case. If that fails, Koli has no options left and will be executed.



Courtesy: AFP Photo

Let's be clear: several young women and children were indeed killed and parts of their bodies found near Pandher's home in Nithari. That truth is not in any dispute. But there are questions – too many questions – about how the investigation has proceeded. Consider some of these:

1. In January 2007, only days after this whole horrific story hit the headlines, the Ministry of Women and Child Development (WCD) assembled a committee "to investigate into allegations of large-scalesexual abuse, rape and murder" in Nithari. The committee's members were all senior bureaucrats. On their visits to Nithari, the police told them that they had identified 17 victims from the skulls andbones found in the ditches near Pandher's house.

The committee raised several disturbing points about the bodies. The doctor who supervised the postmortems, Vinod Kumar, told them that "it was intriguing to observe that all middle part of all bodies (torsos) was missing…[this] gives rise to a suspicion that wrongful use of bodies for organ sale etc could be possible. …[T]he surgical precision with which the bodies were cut also pointed to this fact."

Not only that, Dr Kumar also pointed out that it takes up to three years for a body to decompose. How then were only the "bare bones" of these victims found, less than a year after their murders? Dr Kumar "did not favor the theory of cannibalism as it could be a ruse to divert attention from the missing parts of the bodies." Because of what Dr Kumar said, the WCD Committee recommended that "the CBI should look into all angles including organ trade…there is need to study the organ transplant records of all hospitals in Noida."

Now consider this in the light of what prosecution witness Ramesh Prasad Sharma deposed during the Ghaziabad trial, as recorded in the Allahabad High Court's order about the appeals. Sharma was thecook of Pandher's immediate neighbor in Nithari, one Dr Naveen Chaudhary. He lived in a neighboring bungalow that overlooked the same ditch where the bodies were found. Sharma told the court that he knew "that his master was arrested in the year 1997 in some kidney scam matter."
Let's understand: Pandher and Koli's next-door neighbor was once arrested for organ trading. And yet the entire organ trade angle was never investigated in the Nithari cases.

2. The trial court observed that there were no eyewitnesses to the murders – naturally – and so the prosecution relied, in its case against Koli, on what the trial court Judge called "the admission made by the accused" while in the custody of the police. As every Indian criminal lawyer knows, this must immediately attract our attention to Section 24 of the Indian Evidence Act, which could not be clearer: "A confession made by an accused person is irrelevant in a criminal proceeding, if the making of the confession appears to the Court to have been caused by any inducement, threat or promise."

All we've ever heard and know about how the police treats people in custody should tell us something about the possible inducements, threats and violence brought upon Koli. But we don’t have to draw conclusions only from such assumptions – Koli himself repeatedly mentions in his confession that the police tortured and tutored him. For example: "The [UP] police have got me to memorize all the names…when [they] arrested me they made me see these photos again and again and told me the names of these people." (In his original Hindi: "Naam mein photo dekh kar ke naam ko sab mera ye police ne ratvaya hai…UP Police ne jab mereko pakda tha us time mein matlab ki inhone mere ko ye saare photo dekh dekh kar sab ka inka naam wagarah…matlab ki iska ye naam hai.")

There is also evidence of tutoring in how Koli describes each crime: he made the victim unconscious, tried to have sex with her which was unsuccessful, strangled her, took the body up to the bathroom, came down, took a knife from the kitchen, chopped the corpse, ate a piece or two, put the pieces in plastic bags, threw the bags behind the house at night, washed the bathroom. Seventeen murders, and he describes them all in terms that are similar nearly to the point of being identical. Koli goes on to say in his confession that the police tortured him: "Of these there were 2-3 photos I mean, of those, I was tortured a lot and only then, I mean, they made me confess…I was made to suffer a lot of torture." ("Jisme se do teen photo aisi thi matlab usme mereko kaafi torture kiya aur tab ja kar ke matlab jo inhone mere ko kabool karvai thi…bohot jyada torture kiya gaya tha.")

It is for exactly these reasons that the Evidence Act rules such confessions inadmissible, and Koli's should have been rejected right away. Koli's lawyer made this point during the trial: "The entirecommittal statement becomes void and in the eyes of the law it is a futile statement and nothing can be concluded ... as there is no legal value of the statement made during the police custody." Yet the trial court Judge stated: "I fully disagree with this argument." Thus she allowed it as, in her words, "sufficient proof of the crime."

3. Now, if the confession is treated as true, it's worth at least thinking about what it implies. Koli speaks in it of how Pandher would bring sex workers to the house. Watching them with Pandher, serving food to them, "pressure built in my mind for sex…wrong feelings came in my mind…kill someone and hack…that kind of bad feelings started coming in my mind." When Pandher was forced,because of a guest in the house, to desist from bringing sex workers home, Koli says he was fine. But these thoughts would resume once the guest left and Pandher started with sex workers once more. There is reason to treat this as talk from a seriously disturbed mind. It is at least worth considering that this is a man with a mental health problem, with a mind he has little control over that gets triggered by certain circumstances. He deserves a proper medical examination to ascertain his mental health. Whom does it serve to execute such a man instead of at least letting a doctor see him?

4. The trial court has convicted Koli (and Pandher) in just one murder case that has so far been confirmed by the High Court – of a young woman called Rimpa Halder. That is, what has only ever been proved to the satisfaction of our justice system is that Koli committed this one murder of Haldar (Pandher was subsequently acquitted by the High Court). The other murder cases are still pending either trial or confirmation (see note below). While hearing their appeal, the High Court underlined this very point about Haldar’s case: "The findings recorded by us are only confined to the murder of Rimpa Haldar and the court below shall not be import any observation/comments in the body of this judgement for being applied to the decision while hearing other cases relating to Nithari incident."  For all we know, if Koli is ever tried in all those cases, he could conceivably prove his innocence in one or more.

Yet that possibility was shot down when the Supreme Court heard Koli's appeal – his appeal, remember, in the completed murder trial of Rimpa Haldar. The Supreme Court order explicitly, but inexplicably, proclaims Koli's guilt in all the other cases too: "The appellant appears to be a serial killer. The killings by the appellant are horrifying and barbaric. He used a definite methodology in committing these murders."

How did the Supreme Court arrive at such a conclusion about cases that have not even been tried or confirmed yet? Did the court’s observation not effectively render those other cases irrelevant?

* * *
There are these and plenty more cracks in Koli’s case that several other reports have pointed out: that Koli told the Supreme Court that his toenails and fingernails were missing at the time of his confession, which was evidence of his being tortured. That children continued to disappear in that Noida area even after Koli's arrest. That the police claim 16 murders while the media had reported 19 skeletons.

But perhaps it comes down to this: faced with these ghastly crimes, what do we really want? Justice, so that they never happen again? Or revenge?

Note: Koli has been convicted and sentenced to death by trial courts in four other Nithari cases. In none of these has the conviction and sentence yet been confirmed by the High Court (as it has been in Rimpa Haldar’s case). When a death sentence is handed down, such a confirmation is mandatory; without it, the trial court’s judgment has no legal effect.

Dilip D'Souza writes to keep his cats fed. This pursuit has resulted in five books (most recently, “Final Test: Exit Sachin Tendulkar” and "The Curious Case of Binayak Sen") and several writing awards (the Newsweek/Daily Beast Prize and the Outlook/Picador prize, among others). The cats seem happy. Follow him @DeathEndsFun.

The death penalty in India

Published: October 26, 2014


The writer is the editor and translator of Why I write: Essays by Saadat Hasan Manto, published by Westland, 2014. His book, India, Low Trust Society, will be published by Random House aakar.patel@tribune.com.pk

The fate of two criminals is in the news. One is the convicted Gujarat minister, Mayaben Kodnani, who was sentenced to 28 years for her part in the 2002 massacres. She was given bail on health grounds and is out of jail. This month, the Gujarat government said it would side with her and against the special prosecuting body, which wanted her in jail. The other is Surinder Koli, convicted of one of the most horrific crimes we have heard of in India in recent years. Describing his acts, Harsh Mander wrote in The Hindu that Koli, who was then 33, was “convicted of killing at least 16 children, raping them dead or alive, chopping them into pieces and eating their flesh”.

The Indian Supreme Court has stayed Koli’s execution till October 29, but the fact is that India’s state has been executing people at a high rate under the current president, Pranab Mukherjee. The president is the final arbiter in death penalty cases and his rejection of appeals means that the convict is killed. He rejected Koli’s plea in July and next week’s hearing is probably the last chance Koli’s lawyers have to stop the state from executing their client.

The Times of India reported on February 11, 2013, that Mukherjee had sent more people to the hangman in his first seven months in office than in the previous 15 years. Koli’s lawyers say that his confession was taken through torture and that even if true, it shows a man who is disturbed. Mander wrote: “does even such a man merit any kindness? Is this not one case in which the world is better off without him? But his case — gruesome as it is — only reinforces my resolute opposition to the death penalty … If a crime results from a psychological disorder then, however gruesome and abhorrent the transgression, surely the humane, civilised, socially decent and constitutionally valid recourse would be to treat the problem, not eradicate the victim. What Koli needs desperately is clearly a doctor, not a hangman.”

I agree with Mander and don’t think hanging people solves anything. I would also say that Kodnani, who is in her sixties, being given bail is not a bad thing. I’ve written about this before and in India, the demand for death to convicts ensues from a desire for vengeance, not justice. This is a sign of a primitive society and we must accept that even educated Indians are not exempt from the feeling. It would not be incorrect to say that some of the more savage solutions for curbing crime originate from them. In our parts, public lynching is not uncommon and, like the awful incidents with blacks in the US a century ago, it is acceptable by the public to wound or kill those who offend by stealing or by misbehaviour. This is also a product of that same desire for vengeance, and the emotion is felt strongly and collectively.

The crowd takes offence even when it is not the victim, and feels entitled to join in handing out punishment. Mobs form dangerously quickly on the subcontinent and carry with them a primitive like-mindedness, which makes them lethal. In 2012, Frontline magazine reported that 14 judges sent an appeal to the president seeking his intervention to commute the death sentences of 13 convicts in various jails. The report said that the judges “have appealed to the president because these 13 convicts were erroneously sentenced to death according to the Supreme Court’s own admission”.


The president was also told that two men had, in fact, been wrongly killed. Ravji Rao and Surja Ram, both from Rajasthan, had been executed on May 4, 1996 and April 7, 1997 after flawed judgments. Given this, it is remarkable that Indian politicians and media should be clamouring, as is obvious to any observer, not for clemency, but for execution. After the conviction of those accused in the infamous case of rape and murder of a young woman on a bus in Delhi, CNN reported: “The same crowd outside the courthouse that cheered Friday’s death sentence for the four adults turned their ire on the juvenile. The crowd chanted, ‘Hang the juvenile’.”

It is incumbent on the state and the media to calm passions in a nation where this sort of thing happens. I would like to end by quoting from Shakespeare. We were taught to memorise these lines from Portia in “Merchant of Venice” without thinking in school. They make more sense to me as an adult. “The quality of mercy is not strained/It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven/Upon the place beneath/It is twice blessed/It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.”

Published in The Express Tribune, October 26th, 2014.

Source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/781072/the-death-penalty-in-india/ [last accessed 06.02.2015]