Rai's aide, East-West employee get five years
A designated TADA court sentenced former federal minister Kalpnath
Rai's aide S P Rai and East-West Airlines executive Sabu Chacko
to five years' rigorous imprisonment and imposed a fine of Rs
50,000 on the private airline for harbouring hitmen of the notorious
Dawood Ibrahim gang.
The three accused, along with former Congress leader and six terrorists
of the Dawood gang, were convicted on Monday by the designated
court of Additional Sessions Judge Shiv Narain Dhingra in a Terrorists
and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act case.
With today's hearing, judgment against all but one accused - former
BJP MP Brij Bhushan Saran Singh's private secretary Sanjay Singh
- have been pronounced in the case.
Sanjay Singh has been absconding since the CBI filed the chargesheet
in the case.
Dhingra, besides awarding five years' rigorous imprisonment to
S P Rai, also imposed a fine of Rs 500. In case of default, he
would have to undergo a week's additional imprisonment.
Sabu Chacko was ordered to undergo rigorous imprisonment for five
years and pay a penalty of Rs 10,000. He would have to be in jail
for an extra period of one month if he fails to furnish the penalty.
The East-West Airlines, which has been represented by one of its
director, Pir Mohammed, was asked to pay Rs 50,000 through a bank
draft within a month. In case of failure to submit the amount
within the stipulated period, all movable and immovable properties
of the company would be attached, the court ruled.
Dhingra had, on Monday, ordered Mohammed Ahmed Mansoor, the sixth
hitman of the Dawood group involved in the crime, to undergo life
imprisonment and slapped a fine of Rs 1.5 million for his direct
involvement in anti-national activities.
He will have to face an extra jail period of three years if he
fails to submit the fine.
S P Rai, Sabu Chacko and the East-West Airlines, along with Kalpnath
Rai, were charged with harbouring terrorists of underworld Don
Dawood Ibrahim after the infamous J J Hospital shootout in Bombay
in 1992.
The court had on Monday acquitted the BJP MP for lack of evidence.
Kalpnath Rai and five hitmen of the Dawood group were ordered
to undergo rigorous imprisonment by Dhingra on Monday.
As soon as the judgment was delivered, Tihar Jail authorities
took Sabu Chacko and S P Rai in their custody. They were later
taken to the central jail where the other nine convicts are lodged.
The designated court, after hearing the arguments of the counsel
for the East-West Airlines, Sukumaran Nair, and public prosecutors
N K Sharma and S S Rathi had reserved its orders in the morning.
Nair pleaded mercy for his clients on the grounds that neither
the company nor Sabu Chacko were in a position to pose any threat
to the society, which is the prime consideration before deciding
on the punishment in any case.
He said the company only existed on paper and it was very unlikely
that it would pose any threat to the society in the future.
About Sabu Chakco, the counsel contended that he extended some
help to the culprit without the knowledge that he (the hitman)
was going to perpetuate the crime.
''Sabu neither was a threat to the society at the time of the
commission of crime, nor is he today any threat to the society,''
he added.
However, N K Sharma, counsel for the CBI, the prosecuting agency
in the case, opposed the mercy plea on the grounds that the court
was not to decide whether the accused were in a position to affect
the society in future, but to decide on the punishment for their
crime committed in the past.
He said ''It is a well known fact that terrorists' organisations
need money to carry out their operations and the people who extend
them help commit the gravest crime.''
By helping the culprits monetarily, East-West Airlines has committed
a grave crime and there is no question that they should be given
concession, he added.
He said that defence counsel, by submitting that the East-West
Airlines was a non-entity and cannot indulge in any such crime
in future was pleading for reduction in the penalty amount.
He demanded that no concessions should be given to any such company
and heavy to very heavy penalty should be imposed on it.
As for Sabu Chacko, the CBI counsel said that he was instrumental
in carrying out the directions of the company's senior officials
and thus helped the Dawood hitmen.
Dhingra had on Monday pronounced the jail sentence for seven convicts
- Kalpnath Rai, Mohammed Ahmed Mansoor, Subhash Singh Thakur,
Jayandendra Thakur, Shyam Singh Kishore, Chandrakanta Anna Patil
and Paresh Mohan Desai - and fixed Wednesday as the date for arguments
on sentencing the rest - S P Rai, Sabu Chacko and the East-West
Airlines.
All the accused were taken into custody on that day itself.
Dhingra had sentenced three members of the Dawood Ibrahim gang,
who fled to Delhi after a shootout in the J J Hospital in Bombay,
to life imprisonment and a fine of Rs 1 million each. The three
- Subhash Singh Thakur, Jayanendra Thakur and Shyam Singh Kishore
Garikapatti - were ordered to undergo a further imprisonment of
two years if they failed to pay up the fine.
The three were also convicted under one more section of TADA and
sentenced to five years' imprisonment and a fine of Rs 10,000
each.
They were also convicted under the Arms Act and sentenced to three
years' imprisonment and a fine of Rs 10,000 each.
In case of default on the fine, the three would serve an additional
six months, Dhingra ruled.
The court sentenced hitman Chandrakanta Anna Patil to six years
imprisonment and a fine of Rs 50,000.
As for gangster Paresh Mohan Desai, Dhingra said that he had already
served the sentence period as an undertrial in judicial custody.
However, the court imposed a fine of Rs 10,000 on Desai and said
that in case of non-payment, he would serve a sentence of three
months.
According to the CBI chargesheet, Kalpnath Rai, then federal minister,
had through his assistant S P Rai arrange accommodation for Subhash
Thakur and V N Rai at the guest houses of the National Thermal
Power Corporation in New Delhi and Bombay Suburban State Electricity
Supply at Bombay around the time of the shootout in the JJ Hospital
in September 1992.
Six of Dawood's hitmen, all of whom have been convicted, were
involved in the shootout. While five of them were arrested by
the Delhi police in July 1993, the sixth, Mohammad Ahmed Mansoor
was arrested later.
The bills for the NTPC guest rooms were paid by the corporation
itself. These rooms were booked for the period June 22 to October
3, 1992.
The TADA court had framed charges against Kalpnath Rai and Brij
Bhushan Sharan Singh on May 24, 1996, for harbouring the Dawood
gang hitmen.
Rai, who was arrested by the CBI on February 12, was released
on bail following orders of the Supreme Court on May 6, 1996.
On February 19, 1997, the CBI finished its arguments in the case
and Dhingra reserved the orders for Wednesday.
He had directed all accused to be present in court on Wednesday.
UNI
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