The
Tamil Nadu government on Wednesday decided to release all seven convicts in
Rajiv Gandhi assassination case,
including A G Perarivalan and Nalini. CM J
Jayalalithaa tells TN Assembly that the govt has decided to release Santhan,
Murugan, Perarivalan, Nalini, Robert Pious, Jayakumar and Ravichandran. The
decision to set free the seven Rajiv Gandhi killers was taken at an emergent
cabinet meeting chaired by Jayalalithaa on Wednesday. The Supreme Court on
Tuesday commuted their death sentence to life imprisonment on the ground of 11
years delay in deciding their mercy plea by the Centre.
A
bench headed by Chief Justice P Sathasivam rejected the Centre's submission
that there was no unreasonable delay in deciding their mercy plea and the
condemned prisoners did not go through agonising experience as they were
enjoying life behind the bars. The
bench, also comprising justices Ranjan Gogoi and S K Singh, said they are
unable to accept the Centre's view and commuted the death sentence of
convicts--Santhan, Murugan and Perarivalan--to imprisonment for life subject to
remission by the government. It asked
the Centre to give timely advice to the President so that mercy petitions can
be decided without unreasonable delay. "We
implore the government to render advice in reasonable time to the
President," the bench said, adding that "the executive should
exercise its power one way or other in reasonable time". It said the
government should handle the cases of mercy petitions in a more systematised
manner.
"We
are confident that mercy plea can be decided at much faster speed than what is
being done now," the bench said on Tuesday. Rajiv Gandhi was killed in May 1991. His
assassins were convicted by a TADA court in January 1998 and were awarded death
sentence, which was confirmed by the apex court 11th May 1999. The bench had reserved its verdict on 4th
February on the petition of the three convicts for commutation of their death
sentence to life imprisonment on ground of delay in deciding their mercy plea.
Their
plea was strongly opposed by the Centre which had said that it was not a fit
case for the apex court to commute death sentence on the ground of delay in
deciding mercy plea. Admitting that there has been delay in deciding the mercy
petitions, the government, however, had contended that the delay was not
unreasonable, unexplainable and unconscionable to commute death penalty. The
convicts' counsel had contested the Centre's arguments, saying they have
suffered due to the delay and the apex court should intervene and commute their
death sentence to life term.
The
convicts had submitted that mercy plea of other condemned prisoners, which were
filed after them, were decided but their petitions were kept pending by the
government. The apex court had in May
2012 decided to adjudicate the petitions of Rajiv Gandhi killers against their
death penalty and had directed that their plea, pending with the Madras High
Court, be sent to it. The court had
passed the order on a petition by one L K Venkat, seeking transfer of their
plea out of Tamil Nadu on the ground that free and fair hearing would not be
possible in the state due to the surcharged atmosphere in favour of the
convicts. The Madras High Court had earlier stayed their hanging slated for 9th
September 2011 and issued notice to the Centre and the Tamil Nadu government.
Their
main contention was that the delay of 11 years and four months in disposal of
the mercy petitions made the execution of the death sentence "unduly harsh
and excessive," amounting to violation of their right to life under
Article 21 of the Constitution. The apex
court had on 21st January ruled that delay by the government in deciding mercy
plea of death row convicts can be a ground for commuting their sentence and had
granted life imprisonment to 15 condemned prisoners, including four aides of
forest brigand Veerappan. The court had
held that prolonging execution of capital sentence has a "dehumanising
effect" on condemned prisoners who have to face the agony of waiting for
years under the shadow of death during the pendency of their mercy plea.
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