The Asian Age

SC rejects plea for fresh probe into Gandhi assassinat­ion

- J. VENKATESAN

The Supreme Court on Wednesday dismissed a petition filed by Mumbaibase­d social activist Dr Pankaj Kumarchand­ra Phadnis seeking further probe into the assassinat­ion of the Father of the Nation, Mahatma Gandhi on January 30, 1948.

A Bench of Justices S. A. Bobde and L. Nageswara Rao dismissed the petition observing that the petitioner’s attempt to re- open the controvers­y as an exercise in futility.

The court had appointed senior advocate Amarendra Saran to assist the court to decide a petition filed by Dr. Phadnis and in his report he had categorica­lly stated that there was need for such a probe.

The petitioner had argued that the pistol by which Godse shot Mahatma had a seven- bullet chamber. Three shots were fired and the Police recovered the remaining four unspent bullets. There was no way the fourth shot could have come from this pistol. It had to be from the gun of a second assassin, no trace of whom survives in any record. According to the petitioner, he moved the court after doing some research about the circumstan­ces in which Gandhiji’s assassinat­ion took place and got convinced about the involvemen­t of an unseen hand in the assassinat­ion.

Rejecting the plea the Bench said “We are, however, not satisfied that new research into a long concluded matter justifies a reinitiati­on of criminal investigat­ion or that anything that might be stated should be allowed to reopen a case such as this. Criminal cases which result in conviction and even execution of death sentences and the demise of those who have served life sentences ought not to be reviewed, neither is there a provision in law for review.”

Referring to the argument that the assassinat­ion of Gandhiji was an event of far reaching consequenc­es in the world and the nation has the right to know the truth, the Bench said “While undoubtedl­y the nation has right to know the truth, such a right cannot be invoked where the truth is already well known merely because some academic research raises a different perspectiv­e in law. This would amount to reopening issues based on hearsay.”

The Bench pointed out that Nathuram Godse was convicted on the basis of the evidence of eye- witnesses who were present at the prayer meeting.

The meeting itself was attended by innumerabl­e people.

 ??  ?? Mahatma Gandhi
Mahatma Gandhi

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