Chattanooga Times Free Press

Indian guru sentenced for 20 years in rapes

- BY RISHABH R. JAIN AND MUNEEZA NAQVI

ROHTAK, India — A judge on Monday sentenced a popular and flamboyant Indian spiritual guru to a total of 20 years in prison on charges of raping two female followers.

The sentences were pronounced amid intense security at a prison in the northern town of Rohtak where the guru, who calls himself Dr. Saint Gurmeet Singh Ram Rahim Insan, has been held since his conviction Friday.

Defense lawyer S.K. Garg Narwana said the guru was sentenced to 10 years in each case and fined a total of 3 million rupees, or $47,000.

The conviction sparked violent protests by the guru’s followers that left at least 38 people dead and hundreds injured. As of Monday night there were no reports of new violence.

Ahead of the sentencing announceme­nts, train and bus services to Rohtak were suspended to prevent the guru’s supporters from gathering in the town, located in Haryana state. A curfew was also imposed in Rohtak.

Local police said several layers of security were in place around the prison and government troops had permission to use firearms if any violence erupted.

All cars entering the town were searched.

The guru denied raping the two followers, in a case that stems from charges filed in 2002.

Few details were immediatel­y available following the sentencing, but the guru’s lawyers can appeal the verdict to a higher court. The rape charges were investigat­ed by India’s Central Bureau of Investigat­ion, and a special CBI court convicted and sentenced the guru.

The minimum sentence for the charges was seven years and the maximum was life in prison.

The bling-loving guru, who claims about 50 million followers, is fond of red leather jackets, bejeweled hats, bicep-baring T-shirts — and cinema.

He started a film franchise in which he stars as the “Messenger of God,” or MSG, with divine powers to save the world. In his most recent film, he plays a secret agent armed with a twirled moustache and an assortment of swords to fight aliens and UFOs.

Security was high Monday across Haryana and the neighborin­g state of Punjab, with schools and offices shut in many places.

A curfew was also in place in Sirsa town, where the sprawling main headquarte­rs of the guru’s Dera Sacha Sauda sect are located. Since Saturday, police have been asking followers to leave the ashram compound, and around 20,000 people left.

Local police spokesman Surjeet Singh said some people were still inside the compound, but that it was impossible to know how many. He said about 4,000 government troops, including army and paramilita­ry soldiers, were patrolling the tiny town and the area outside the ashram.

When the guru was found guilty Friday, tens of thousands of his enraged followers set fire to government buildings, vandalized bus stations and government vehicles, and attacked police and TV journalist­s in Panchkula, where the verdict was announced.

The rape conviction isn’t the guru’s only brush with the law. He is awaiting trial on a murder charge over the death of a journalist, and is also under investigat­ion by the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion over allegation­s of forcing several male followers to undergo castration­s to bring them closer to God. He has denied the accusation­s.

 ?? ASSPOCIATE­D PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Indian spiritual guru who calls himself Dr. Saint Gurmeet Singh Ram Rahim Insan, center, greets followers in 2016 ahead of the release of his movie “MSG: The Warrior Lion Heart.” A judge Monday sentenced him to 20 years in prison on charges of raping...
ASSPOCIATE­D PRESS FILE PHOTO Indian spiritual guru who calls himself Dr. Saint Gurmeet Singh Ram Rahim Insan, center, greets followers in 2016 ahead of the release of his movie “MSG: The Warrior Lion Heart.” A judge Monday sentenced him to 20 years in prison on charges of raping...

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