The Free Press Journal

16 EX-PAC TROOPERS GET LIFE TERM FOR 1987 HASHIMPURA MASSACRE

- AGENCIES /

The Delhi High Court on Wednesday sentenced to life imprisonme­nt 16 former troopers of the Uttar Pradesh Provincial Armed Constabula­ry (PAC) for killing 38 people in 1987, calling it a targeted massacre of unarmed and innocent people from a community.

Justices S. Muralidhar and Vinod Goel reversed a 2005 judgment of the trial court, which had acquitted the 16 men on charges of murder and other crimes, and held them responsibl­e for criminal conspiracy, kidnapping, murder and disappeara­nce of evidence. The High Court was hearing pleas challengin­g the trial court decision.

"The present case is yet another instance of custodial killing where the legal system has been unable to effectivel­y prosecute the perpetrato­rs of gross human rights abuses," the court said.

"The prolongati­on of the trial for over two decades, compounded by the endemic systemic delays, have frustrated the attempts at securing effective justice for the victims."

The High Court held that this amounted to targeted killings by an armed force "of the unarmed, innocent and defenceles­s members of a particular community" and called it a disturbing aspect of the case.

There were originally 19 accused but three died during the prolonged trial. All the 16 from the PAC are now retired.

The High Court directed the convicts to surrender on or before November 22. If they failed, then the concerned Station House Officer (SHO) were ordered to take them into custody.

Vibhuti Narain Rai, the then Superinten­dent of Police in Ghaziabad who registered the first FIR in the case on the night of May 22-23, 1987, told IANS: "This was the first and biggest custodial massacre in independen­t India.

"There was a similar carnage in Nellie (Assam) but that was not in police custody unlike this."

The Hashimpura victims, all Muslims, were picked up from the Hashimpura neighbourh­ood by the 41st Battalion of the PAC during a search operation, taken away in trucks, lined up and shot dead in cold blood. The bodies were dumped in a canal.

The men shot at were said to be 42 but four of them escaped by pretending to be dead.

The charge sheet was filed before the Chief Judicial Magistrate in Ghaziabad in 1996. The case was transferre­d to Delhi in September 2002 on the Supreme Court's orders following a petition by the families of the victims and the survivors.

A sessions court here in July 2006 framed charges of murder, attempt to murder, tampering with evidence and conspiracy against all the accused. The Delhi High Court said: "...the relatives of the victims who died as a result of the brutal and bone-chilling action of the PAC remained in the dark about not only the fate of the victims themselves but also about the steps taken to investigat­e the case and unearth the truth.

"Indeed, their 31 years of waiting for justice may have eroded their faith in the state machinery.

"This case involves the killing of around 38 innocent persons in cold blood by members of an armed force, the PAC. The gravity of the crime is obvious.

"We are conscious that for the families of those killed, this (punishment) is perhaps too little, too late," the court said.

 ??  ?? 31 yr wait for justice may have eroded Hashimpura massacre victims' faith in state machinery: HCTHE HASHIMPURA victims, all Muslims, were picked up from the Hashimpura neighbourh­ood by the 41st Battalion of the PAC during a search operation, taken away in trucks, lined up and shot dead in cold blood. The bodies were dumped in a canal.
31 yr wait for justice may have eroded Hashimpura massacre victims' faith in state machinery: HCTHE HASHIMPURA victims, all Muslims, were picked up from the Hashimpura neighbourh­ood by the 41st Battalion of the PAC during a search operation, taken away in trucks, lined up and shot dead in cold blood. The bodies were dumped in a canal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India