Special POTA Judge P R Deshmukh said that convict Muzammil Ansari (who had planted the bombs) will undergo imprisonment till the end of his life.
"I am of the view that to award capital punishment to Ansari in present case just falls short of the rarest of the rare case. Therefore I am not inclined to endorse the punishment of death sentence to Ansari," Deshmukh observed.
Two other convicts who were granted life are Farhaan Khot and Wahid Ansari. Six others were awarded various jail terms ranging from 2-10 years.
The court ordered that 75 per cent of the fine amount (Rs 9.45 lakhs) recovered (from the convicts) will go to District Legal Services Authority while rest will go to the Indian Railways as compensation towards damages caused to Railway on account of Mulund (blast) incident.
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However, it directed DLSA, Mumbai to decide the quantum of compensation to be awarded to the victims and dependents and accordingly pay it.
Yesterday, the court had reserved its verdict on the quantum of sentence to ten persons convicted for their role in the multiple blasts, till today.
According to prosecution, Muzammil Ansari, who holds
an engineering degree, planted all the bombs. He planted the bombs along with Tahir Janab Ansari who is a bomb expert and was active in placing crude bombs in trains in different parts of the country in 1993.
Wahid, according to prosecution, allowed his clinic to be used for assembling bombs. The forensic reports confirmed that the traces from the clinic matched with the traces in explosion site.
During the course of arguments on the sentencing, Special Public Prosecutor Rohini Salian had demanded capital punishment for Muzammil Ansari.
She had also sought life imprisonment for Saquib Nachan, Gulam Khotal, Farhaan Khot and Wahid Ansari.
In a combined charge sheet filed against 15 accused in the Mulund, Vile Parle and Mumbai Central blast cases, police had charged them with offences under POTA, the Explosive Substances Act and preparation to wage war against the nation and criminal conspiracy under the Indian Penal Code.
The trial began in 2014, as earlier some of the accused had challenged POTA and had also contested clubbing of the cases.