Supreme Court Upholds Death Sentence For Kasab

         Supreme Court Upholds Death Sentence For Kasab New Delhi: The Supreme Court Wednesday upheld the death sentence awarded to Pakistani terrorist Kasab for his role in the Mumbai savagery, marking the end of the legal battle for a man who desperately tried to escape the hangman’s noose.

In a ruling bound to cast a shadow on India-Pakistan relations, Justices Aftab Alam and C.K. Prasad said: “We are constrained to hold that death penalty is the only sentence that can be given in the circumstances.”
The verdict got a thumbs up from both the Congress and the BJP besides those who survived the Nov 26-29 audacious attack that left 166 Indians as well as foreigners dead and scores injured.
In Iran, External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna said he was sure Pakistan would “take note of what has happened in the Supreme Court”. There was no immediate official reaction in Pakistan.
Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab, now 25 and in a Mumbai prison, was one of 10 heavily armed Pakistanis who sneaked into Mumbai by sea Nov 26, 2008 night and unleashed mayhem that almost caused an India-Pakistan war.
After initial denials, Islamabad admitted in January 2009 that Kasab was a Pakistani. “I am more than happy,” reacted Ragini Sharma in Mumbai. Her husband, Sushil Kumar Sharma, a railway officer, was one of the many gunned down by Kasab and an accomplice at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus. “My husband is not going to return but it gives some peace to my soul that the perpetrator of the crime has been punished even if he is just a pawn.”
Both Ragini Sharma and others in Mumbai insisted that the Pakistani should be hanged at the earliest.
Congress general secretary Digvijay Singh also said that Kasab should be executed quickly. Shiv Sena leader Uddhav Thackeray demanded that Kasab should be hanged publicly.
The Pakistani moved the apex court challenging the death sentence given by a trial court, which was upheld by the Bombay High Court.
The judges rejected Kasab’s contention that the Mumbai attack was a war against the Indian government and not against the Indian state or people.
Kasab, the only Pakistani terrorist to be captured, came from a poor family in an impoverished village of Pakistan’s Punjab province. Son of a vendor, he signed up with the Lashkar-e-Taiba to wage jehad.
The Supreme Court said the Indian government was only the elected organ of the state and the repository of sovereign powers.
The court did not accept Kasab’s argument that not providing him a lawyer soon after his arrest vitiated the entire process, including his trial and consequent conviction and sentencing on 80 counts. The judges reminded him that he had initially refused to accept an Indian lawyer.
In a concurring judgment giving more reasons for upholding Kasab’s death sentence, Justice Prasad said it was evident that the conspiracy to attack Mumbai was hatched by Pakistanis in Pakistan.
The court also upheld the acquittal of Indians Fahim Ansari and Sabauddin Ahmed who were accused of providing vital support to the Pakistani killers prior to the 26/11 attack.
The Maharashtra government had challenged the acquittal of Fahim and Sabauddin by the Bombay High Court. Kasab was given death sentence by a Mumbai trial court May 6, 2010. The Bombay High Court upheld the death penalty Feb 21, 2011.

Short URL: http://www.weeklyvoice.com/?p=17228

Leave a Reply

Photo Gallery


* Tablet CONTEST RULES: The Weekly Voice Tablet Giveaway will run from now until --. No purchase necessary to register. You must be at least 18 years old to enter. Only one entry per person. Employees of the Company and members of the immediate family of any such persons are not eligible to participate and win. Two entries will be picked every two weeks, to be entered into a final draw. Winner will be selected from this short list and will be notified by e-mail and phone. Prizes are not transferrable or redeemable for cash. The Company reserves the right to disqualify any participant or winner and may refuse to award any prize to a person who is ineligible or has violated any rule, gained unfair advantage in participating in the contest, or obtained winner status using fraudulent means. Further, the Company will resolve any disputes, conflicting claims or ambiguities concerning the rules and the Company's decisions concerning such disputes shall be final. All decisions will be made by the Company and are final. Void where prohibited. Website Designed by Creative Nerds - 647.449.4531