1993 blasts: CBI seeks severest penalty for convicts

Convicts responsible ‘brutal, grotesque, dastardly’ crime that killed 257 people, CBI counsel argues

June 23, 2017 12:50 am | Updated 12:50 am IST

Mumbai: Seeking the severest possible sentence for the six people convicted last week in the 1993 Mumbai serial terror blasts, the prosecution on Thursday told the Special TADA court that many civilised countries still have death penalty for such offences.

While deciding the sentence, the court should keep in mind that 257 people had died and 713 injured in the 1993 Mumbai serial blasts, special CBI counsel Deepak Salvi urged.

The anti-terror court had last week convicted six persons including gangsters Abu Salem and Mustafa Dossa in the case, 24 years after the blasts. The court is now hearing arguments on quantum of sentence. “These two figures (of the dead and injured) are sufficient to show the brutality of the crime,” Mr. Salvi said.

Five of the accused were convicted for murder and conspiracy under the IPC and also under TADA, the maximum punishment for which is death, he said. The conspiracy, starting from the first meeting held at Mustafa Dossa’s house in Dubai, and the acts carried out later “with grit and tenacity” resulted in a bloodbath, he said.

The crime was committed in “an extremely brutal, grotesque, diabolical, revolting and dastardly manner so as to instil intense and extreme fear and thereby terrorise people of this peaceful, democratic civilisation i.e. the Republic of India and the city of Mumbai, a city that has been reeling from it effects ever since”.

“Punishment by the State is vital to keep ordinary citizens from taking the law into their own hands; some form of retribution is vital for closure, for righting the wrong,” he argued. Mr. Salvi also said “most countries in the modern world” including Russia, USA, France, Belgium, Malaysia, China and Japan have retained the death penalty, and these countries cannot “by any standard be called uncivilised nations or immature societies”.

To bolster the argument, he also cited the Supreme Court’s judgement upholding the death sentence for Yakub Memon in the previous phase of the trial. Memon was the only convict to hang.

The quantity of RDX (1,500 kg) smuggled in by the conspirators was enough to reduce entire Mumbai to ashes, Mr. Salvi said. The prosecution’s argument will continue tomorrow.

In the first phase of the trial, one hundred accused were convicted. The trial of Abu Salem, Dossa, Karimullah Khan, Feroz Khan, Riyaz Siddiqui, Tahir Merchant and Abdul Qayyum was separated because they were arrested later. Mr. Qayyum was acquitted by the court.

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