The Supreme Court on Friday granted bail to eight
convicts in the infamous 1987 Hashimpura case involving the massacre of 38
persons by the Provincial Armed Constabulary personnel.
A bench comprising Justices Abhay S Oka and
Augustine George Masih took note of the submissions of senior advocate Amit
Anand Tiwari, appearing for four convicts, that they were suffering prolonged
incarceration after the Delhi High Court reversed their acquittal by the trial
court in the case.
On Friday, senior advocate Tiwari, while
representing Sami Ullah, Niranjan Lal, Mahesh Prasad, and Jaipal Singh, argued
the appellants had been in jail for over six years since the high court
verdict.
He highlighted that the appellants were previously
acquitted by the trial court and their conduct during the trial, and appeal
process, was exemplary.
He further contended that the reversal of the trial
court's well-reasoned acquittal by the high court was based on erroneous
grounds.
The court took note of the submissions and allowed
the pending bail pleas of eight convicts.
The Hashimpura massacre occurred on May 22, 1987
when Provincial Armed Constabulary (PAC) personnel, belonging to the 41st
Battalion's "C-Company", allegedly rounded up approximately 50 Muslim
men from Hashimpura in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, during communal tensions.
The victims were taken to the city outskirts on the
pretext of being ferried to a safer place due to communal riots. They were
fatally shot there, and their bodies were dumped in a canal.
The incident resulted in the death of 38 persons,
leaving only five survivors to recount the horror.
The trial court, in 2015, acquitted 16 PAC
personnel, citing a lack of evidence to establish their identification and
involvement.
The Delhi High Court, in 2018, reversed the trial
court's decision and convicted the 16 accused under Sections 302 (murder), 364
(kidnapping or abducting in order to murder), and 201 (causing disappearance of
evidence) read with Section 120B (criminal conspiracy) of the IPC, sentencing
them to life imprisonment.
The convicts challenged the high court's verdict,
and their appeals were pending in the top court.
A chargesheet was filed against C-Company's 19
personnel, including platoon commander Surender Pal Singh. However, the crime
branch, criminal investigation department of UP police in its report indicted
66 personnel of the PAC for the killings.
Of the 19 accused, Om Prakash Sharma, Kush Kumar Singh
and Surender Pal Singh, died during the pendency of the trial.
The high court then convicted the remaining 16
former PAC officials and sentenced them to life term imprisonment.
Those convicted are Suresh Chand Sharma, Niranjan
Lal, Kamal Singh, Ram Bir Singh, Sami Ullah, Mahesh Prasad Singh, Jai Pal
Singh, Ram Dhiyan, Arun Kumar, Lila Dhar Lohni, Hamir Singh, Kunwar Pal Singh,
Buda Singh, Budhi Singh, Mohkam Singh and Basant Ballabh.