Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

BISHOP SENT TO 2DAY CUSTODY

- Ramesh Babu letters@hindustant­imes.com

A Kerala court on Saturday sent bishop Franco Mulakkal to two-day police custody in nun rape case.

THIRUVANAN­THPURAM: The judicial first class magistrate’s court in Pala on Saturday remanded the former Bishop of Jalandhar Franco Mulakkal , finally arrested by the Kerala police on Friday on charges of raping a nun, to police custody for two days.

The bishop, who tried to brazen it out when the charges first emerged was arrested on Friday after three days of questionin­g, but soon admitted to a hospital because he complained of uneasiness — a standard ploy among many people arrested so as to avoid custody. On Saturday, though, he was discharged from the hospital after doctors said he was not suffering from any major ailment.

Mulakkal, accused of raping the nun 13 times between 2014 and 2016, was relieved of his church duties by the Pope’s Ambassador on Thursday.

In court, the police sought a three-day custody of Mulakkal but his lawyer opposed this, saying he had already been questioned for eight hours in Jalandhar and three consecutiv­e days in Kerala and sought bail for him.

After the police countered that they still had to collect evidence against him and that he would have to undergo several tests, including a so-called potency examinatio­n the court agreed to a two-day remand. The accused also complained to the judge that police forcibly took his blood and saliva.

Mulakkal was charged under Indian Penal Code (IPC) Sections 342 (wrongful confinemen­t), 376 (rape), 377 (unnatural offence) and 560 (1) (criminal intimidati­on). Prosecutio­n said that there are 81 witnesses in the case and the number may go up. The former bishop’s bail plea is to come before the Kerala High Court on Sept 25.

Police officers who asked not to be identified say their investigat­ions have unearthed the picture of a habitual offender and predator and that separate FIRs will be filed against him if other victims are ready file complaint. Most complaints of this nature are usually sent first to church authoritie­s.

In this particular case, the church chose to ignore the nun’s complaint against Mullakal. In her letter to the Pope’s Ambassador last week, the victim, a mother superior, alleged that 20 nuns had left the Missionari­es of Jesus congregati­on after the former bishop’s advances. Mullakal has denied the charges.

Meanwhile, five nuns protesting in Kochi for two weeks, seeking justice for the survivor, formally ended their stir on Saturday.

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