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By Nirnimesh Kumar
Sajjan Kumar coming out of a court in New Delhi on Monday.
With this, he has been acquitted in all the three anti-Sikh riot cases registered against him following an inquiry by a Judicial Commission. The riots broke out in the Capital in the wake of the former Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi's assassination on October 31, 1984. Acquitting the Congress leader and nine of his co-accused, the Additional Sessions judge, Manju Goel, said: "The prosecution (CBI) has miserably failed to prove the case against them.'' There was no eyewitness in the case and neither was the prosecution able to present an unbroken chain of circumstantial evidence to make out a foolproof case. Thirteen persons were accused in the case. Three of them died during the trial. Quoting a relevant paragraph of the statement recorded by Anwar Kaur, based on which the Delhi Police had registered the case, Ms. Goel said that Ms. Kaur was not sure whether Mr. Kumar was leading the mob which lynched her husband, Nevin Singh, at Sultanpuri in West Delhi on November 1, 1984. Ms. Kaur had, in her statement, said that a mob instigated by Mr. Kumar had killed her husband in front of her residence. ``The mob set my house on fire, dragged my husband out and then the accused, Nathu Pradhan and others, hit him with lathis causing his death. The mob then put my bedding on the body and set it ablaze," Ms. Kaur told the court.
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