Neelam Krishnamurthy, who led the Association of Victims of Uphaar Tragedy (AVUT), was reacting to the Supreme Court order allowing the Ansal brothers to walk free by paying Rs 60 crore a fine.
Maintaining that nobody cared about the human life of ordinary citizen, she said "I am very much disappointed. 18 years back, I lost faith in God and 18 years later, I lost faith in judiciary."
"Had it been the lives of children of politicians and judges, justice would have been done within a year," she said, adding that the judiciary "cannot understand the plight of a mother who has stood 18 years before the court to get disappointment. Nobody cares about ordinary people but rich and powerful get away."
She said the tragedy, in which 59 lives were lost on June 13, 1997 during the screening of blockbuster film 'Border', was due to the "wilful negligence" of the theatre owners who risked the lives of the movie-goers for pecuniary gain.