Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Amid grief, convicts’ parents insist their sons were innocent

- Shiv Sunny shiv.sunny@hindustant­imes.com

nNEWDELHI: When 68-year-old Rambai met her son, Mukesh Singh, inside Delhi’s Tihar Jail on Thursday and had tea with him, she hoped he and three other convicts in the December 16 Delhi gang-rape case would escape the gallows again. Singh told her not to trust the news about the hangings, which had been delayed since 2017 when the Supreme Court upheld death sentences against the four. They exhausted all their legal remedies before they were executed Friday.

“Mukesh was laughing as we sat across a table. He told me the hangings would be delayed yet again. I believed him,” said Rambai, Singh’s mother.

Less than 24 hours later, Rambai was mourning in between drags of hookah at her dingy tworoom set house in Ravi Dass Camp slum in New Delhi’s RK Puram area. Giving her company were her two women relatives.

The slum gained notoriety for being home to four of the six people arrested for the 2012 rape.

Residents came out of their homes when bodies of two other convicts, Vinay Sharma and Pawan Gupta, were brought to the neighbourh­ood a little after 2pm. Some wept silently. “I cry for Vinay’s parents. They are good people and do not deserve any boycott for the crimes of their son,” said a woman, who did not want to be identified.

Some men assisted Gupta’s father, Hira Lal, as he walked towards his son’s body. Others walked around aggressive­ly to ensure no one was recording the funeral as scores of police and paramilita­ry personnel watched.

A little before 3pm, a few dozen people walked about 3km to a crematoriu­m in Green Park to cremate Gupta and Sharma’s bodies.

Rambai, meanwhile, prepared to leave for her village in Rajasthan’s Karauli. Singh’s body was directly driven there as was Akshay Thakur’s to his native place in Bihar’s Muzaffarpu­r.

“I will cremate him at my birthplace. I have lived in this slum for decades, but this is not my home,” said Rambai. She added she was not angry with the residents, who mostly kept away from him while she fought a seven-year battle to save her son from the gallows. “I sold my house and a plot of land in my native village to fight for my son. I would not live with the regret that I did not try to save him,” she said, insisting her son was framed. Her elder son, Ram Singh, an accused in the rape, was found dead in jail during the rape trial in March 2013.

The parents of Sharma and Gupta also insisted their children were innocent. Sharma’s mother and Gupta’s father objected to celebratio­ns after the hangings.

Hira Lal saidhe would continue to fight to get his son’s name cleared. “I will seek reopening and reinvestig­ation into the case,” said Hira Lal, acknowledg­ing it would be difficult.

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