Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

HC reserves order on SIT plea to cancel Sajjan’s bail

- Press Trust of India

KUMAR WAS GRANTED ANTICIPATO­RY BAIL BY A TRIAL COURT ON DEC 21 IN TWO SEPARATE CASES OF KILLING OF 3 SIKHS DURING RIOTS AFTER ASSASSINAT­ION OF THEN PM INDIRA GANDHI

NEWDELHI:THE Delhi high court on Tuesday reserved its order on a plea by the special investigat­ion team (SIT) probing 1984 anti-sikh riots cases, seeking to cancel the anticipato­ry bail granted to Congress leader Sajjan Kumar in two matters.

Justice Anu Malhotra heard the arguments of the SIT’S counsel, Sajjan Kumar and riot victims and said it would pass an order.

During the hearing, additional solicitor general Sanjay Jain, appearing for the SIT which is probing the charges against Kumar, argued that the trial court’s order granting anticipato­ry bail to the leader was “perverse” and there were overwhelmi­ng circumstan­ces which were ignored.

“The observatio­ns in the bail order show that the order was perverse. In a matter of such a magnitude, if anticipato­ry bail is put up before the trial court, it is imperative upon the judge to consider the material gathered by the prosecutin­g agency, which is SIT in this case,” Jain contended.

He argued that the trial court’s bail order could not have been and ought not to have been passed, and should be set aside.

While reading out the statements of various witnesses, the additional solicitor general said the sessions judge had observed in his order that the evidence was hearsay. However, all these evidences are not hearsay and there are eye witnesses to the incident, he added.

Kumar was granted anticipato­ry bail by a trial court on December 21 last year in two separate cases of killing of three Sikhs during the riots which had occurred after the assassinat­ion of then prime minister Indira Gandhi.

Opposing the plea, advocate Anil Sharma, appearing for the Congress leader, said he was neither defending the incident, nor saying that it did not take place.

He submitted that former MP’S name was never taken earlier and it was a case of fresh allegation­s coming up after 32 years which was not allowed.

Senior advocate HS Phoolka, representi­ng the riot victims, said the SIT was fully empowered to probe the case.

There are two cases filed against Kumar falling in the jurisdicti­ons of Janakpuri and Vikaspuri police stations in West Delhi. The complaint in Janakpuri pertains to the killing of two Sikhs, Sohan Singh and his sonin-law Avtar Singh, on November 1, 1984, and in the other, where another Sikh, Gurcharan Singh, was burnt on November 2, 1984, in the jurisdicti­on of the Vikaspuri police station. Gurcharan, who was half burnt, had remained bedridden for 29 years. He died three years ago.

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