"It was the private firing by Shri Ehsan Jafri that acted as a catalyst and which infuriated the mob to such an extent that it went out of control, the limited police force available there had no means to control or disperse such mob, which had gathered in large numbers post the incident of private firing," special SIT court judge P B Desai said in his order.
"Shri Ehsan Jafri had perpetrated acts of firing from his weapon from different locations within Gulberg Society upon the mob, causing injuries and death of one person, which in my opinion was the catalyst, which provoked the mob to such proportions that it went out of control and thus resulted into the killing frenzy, where a large number of innocent persons lost their lives," the court said.
Rejecting the conspiracy angle to the incident, the court said it was "unnatural" that while no grave untoward incident took place between 9.30 am and 1.30 pm (on February 28, 2002), things turned "ugly" all of a sudden after 1.30 pm "as if some tap was turned on, which resulted in a flood of water and the carnage was perpetrated."
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"The incidence of Gulberg society is in fact a culmination of a series of incidents, which happened at different time frames... Suddenly transgressing into this grave and heinous carnage which has resulted in the death of such large number of women, children and elderly," it said while rejecting conspiracy theory.
The court here today sentenced 11 convicts to life imprisonment in the case of burning alive of 69 people, including Jafri, in the 2002 post-Godhra violence.
The court also awarded 10-year jail term to one of the 13 convicted for lesser offences while 12 others have been given seven-year sentence each.