Rediff.com« Back to articlePrint this article

American Centre case: SC commutes death sentence of 2 convicts

May 21, 2014 13:56 IST

The Supreme Court on Wednesday granted life to two death convicts in the 2002 American Center attack case in Kolkata with a rider that the mastermind will remain behind the bars till death and the other will spend at least 30 years in jail without remission.

A bench of justices A K Patnaik and F M Ibrahim Khalifulla upheld the conviction of the mastermind Aftab Ahmad Ansari and Jamiluddin Nasir but said death is not warranted in the case.

The court passed the order on appeals filed by Ansari and Nasir challenging the Calcutta High Court order which had confirmed death sentence awarded to them by trial court.

The apex court had in 2010 stayed the death sentence awarded to them.

Two motorcycle-borne men had indiscriminately fired with an AK-47 assault rifle at policemen outside the American Center on Jawaharlal Nehru Road on January 22, 2002, killing 6 of them and injuring 14 others.

A division bench of the Calcutta High Court had in February 2010 upheld the death sentence of Ansari along with co-accused Jamiluddin Nasir but commuted the capital punishment awarded to three others to seven years imprisonment.

The sessions court in April 2005 had sentenced Ansari, Nasir and three others to death while acquitting two others.

Just four days after the attack, two persons -- Salim and Zahid -- were injured in an encounter with a Delhi Police team in Hazaribagh in Jharkhand and they subsequently died. The police had come to know about the involvement of Ansari in the American Center attack from their dying declarations.

Ansari was arrested from Dubai thereafter and was deported to India on February 9, 2002, to face trial. He was part of terror outfit Asif Reza Commando Force that reportedly had links with Harkat-ul-Jehadi-e-Islam.

© Copyright 2024 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.