1995 Jammu blasts: SC holds Hizbul operative guilty

July 02, 2015 08:31 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 05:24 pm IST - New Delhi

The Supreme Court has set aside the acquittal of a Pakistan national, a Hizbul Mujahideen operative who was involved in the serial blasts at Maulana Azad Memorial Stadium in Jammu during Republic Day function in 1995 that had claimed eight lives.

A bench of Justices A.K. Sikri and U.U. Lalit, while relying on the confessional statement of Ghulam Nabi given before CBI, said, “the confession of an accused is a substantive piece of evidence and his conviction can be founded on such confession itself.”

The court asked Nabi, who has been convicted under the now repealed Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act (TADA), to appear before it for advancing arguments on quantum of sentence in the case.

Three bomb explosions had taken place in the Maulana Azad Memorial Stadium in Jammu aimed to kill then Governor Lt General K.V. Krishna Rao during his address to a huge gathering of about 40,000 people, including dignitaries, VIPs, senior government officers, political leaders and citizens on Republic Day in 1995. Mr. Rao had a narrow escape.

The apex court, however, upheld the acquittal of another accused Wasim Ahmed, a Kashmiri, saying nothing was placed on record to establish his role in the conspiracy and execution thereof.

The judgement came on the appeal by Jammu and Kashmir government against a trial court decision acquitting both the accused of the charges under provisions of the TADA Act, the Ranbir Penal Code and the Explosives Substances Act.

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