67-year-old Arputhammal had all along maintained that her son was innocent and was waging a battle, touring various states to mobilise support from several quarters including political party leaders to realise her goal, which fructified with the apex court commuting the death penalty of her son and two others to life term on grounds of delay in disposing their mercy pleas.
Ever since Arputhammal sent her then 19-year-old son with the Special Investigation Team (SIT) for probe soon after the assassination of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi on May 21, 1991 at Sriperumbudur, she has been waiting for Perarivalan to return home.
She could not be see her son's transition from a teenager into a man-- except visiting him at the special cell at Vellore prison on some occasions.
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While her son was sending clemency petitions from the prison to the President and the Supreme Court repeatedly, Arputhammal continued her struggle outside.
She also took to other platforms of voicing her opinion-- like in the latest 'Chennai Book Fair' in January, where she had put up a stall and sold books and DVDs on abolition of death sentence.
She praised Chief Justice P Sathasivam for his judgement "from the peak of humanitarianism" and recalled how the sentence of 15 death convicts were commuted. "My wish is that there should be more such judgements in the future. That is my request.