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Bus burning case: SC stays death penalty to 3 AIADMK workers

January 28, 2011 14:21 IST

The Supreme Court on Friday stayed the execution of capital punishment upheld by it earlier for three All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam workers involved in the infamous Dharampuri bus burning incident, in which three college girls were burnt to death in Tamil Nadu in 2000.

The order was passed on petitions filed by the three convicts -- C Muniappan, Ravindran and Nedunchezhian -- seeking review of the apex court's verdict last year, which upheld the death penalty awarded to them.

While suspending the execution of the death sentence, a bench of justices B Sudershan Reddy and S S Nijjar also issued a notice to the Tamil Nadu government, seeking its response to the writ petition filed by the convicts.

The apex court had on August 30 last year upheld the death penalty for the trio, rejecting their pleas for leniency. The court had ruled that their gruesome offence fell under the category of 'rarest of rare offence' warranting nothing less than the death penalty.

The three victims of the infamous Dharampuri bus burning incident -- Kokilavani, Gayathri and Hemalatha -- were students of the Tamil Nadu Agricultural University, Coimbatore.

The bus in which they were travelling along with 44 other students and two teachers was torched on February 2, 2000, following AIADMK chief Jayalalithaa's conviction in the Pleasant Stay Hotel case.

On February 16, 2007, a trial court in Salem had awarded the death sentence to the three accused after finding them guilty of murder, attempt to murder and other charges under
IPC.

The Madras high court had on December 6, 2007 confirmed the capital punishment and the sentence of six months to two years imprisonment imposed on 25 others.

Upholding the death sentence, the apex court had said, "These were the murders of helpless, innocent, unarmed, young girl students in a totally unprovoked situation. No mitigating circumstances could be pointed to us, which would convince us to impose a lesser sentence on them. Their activities were not only barbaric but inhuman to the highest degree.

"Thus, the manner of the commission of the offence in the present case is extremely brutal, diabolical, grotesque and cruel. It is shocking to the collective conscience of the society.

"We do not see any cogent reason to interfere with the punishment of death sentence awarded to Nedunchezhian, Ravindran and Muniappan by the courts below," the apex court had said.  

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