The Madras High Court today directed the state government to preserve the bodies of those killed in police firing during the anti-Sterlite protest at Tuticorin on May 22, until further orders.
A vacation bench of justices T Ravindran and P Velmurugan also directed the government to file its counter affidavit by May 30 on a public interest litigation from three advocates.
The petitioners sought an interim direction to authorities to appoint a team of private doctors to conduct re-postmortem with the process being recorded.
The bench said advocates shall be permitted to provide necessary legal assistance to the affected persons in accordance with law.
The PIL also sought an inquiry by the Principal District and Sessions Judge, with regard to 'sniper shooting' by plainclothes men.
They also sought a direction to the government to take appropriate action by prosecuting officials including the district collector and SP, Tuticorin, besides compensation to the relatives of the deceased and injured.
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The PIL also sought an interim direction to release all those arrested or illegally detained in connection with yesterday's protests.
When the PIL came up, advocate R Sankarasubbu appearing for petitioners submitted that the Sterlite factory was causing health hazards and polluting the entire district.
Therefore, the people in the district were agitating for years for closing down the factory. Instead of protecting the people, the state was protecting the industry, he submitted.
The counsel alleged that the action against the protesters was not spontaneous but pre-planned.
It was pre-planned murder, the counsel charged.
"Therefore, a sitting district judge should probe the police firing."
In response to the allegations made by the petitioners, Additional advocate general Narmada Sampath said, "The government is with the people and for the people. All procedures were scrupulously followed. Four magistrates were monitoring the post-mortem."