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SC for open court hearing of review plea in Uphaar case

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Supreme Court will give an open court hearing on a petition seeking review of its August 19, 2015 judgement by which real estate barons Sushil and Gopal Ansal were required to serve two years jail term if they failed to pay Rs 30 crore each within three months in the 1997 Uphaar fire tragedy.

A three-judge bench comprising justices A R Dave, Kurian Joseph and A K Goel after in-chamber proceeding decided to hear the review petition filed by the CBI and the Association of Victims of Uphaar Tragedy (AVUT) in an open court.

59 cine-goers had died of asphyxia during the screening of Bollywood movie 'Border'.
 

The Ansals have already deposited Rs 30 crore each.

The probe agency, in its review plea, has said the apex court did not give it time to put its views forth which has resulted in the "miscarriage of justice".

"Due to the paucity of time on the day on which this case was heard, the prosecution could not adequately put across the reasons why this court should not substitute a monetary fine in place of a jail sentence.

"This petition also seeks to raise issue of an apparent error of law in the judgement and order of this court which has occasioned a grave miscarriage of justice," the agency said in its plea.

The association and the CBI had also filed application seeking open court hearing on the review pleas.

The three-judge bench had, on August 19, sent Ansal brothers, Sushil and Gopal, to two-year rigorous jail term if they failed to pay Rs 30 crore each within three months.

In a judgement on September 23, the bench had said the "magnitude" of the tragedy case "calls for a higher sentence" but the court has to limit itself to the choice available under the law.
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The review plea filed by AVUT, said, "The impugned orders are in gross violation of natural justice and have been passed without affording victims any effective, meaningful hearing."

It said the apex court judgements "bestow an unwarranted leniency on convicts whose conviction in the most heinous of offences has been upheld by all courts including this court and sentences imposed on them have been substituted with fine without assigning any reason or basis."

"The sentences of the convicts have been reduced to the period undergone without taking into account the gravity of their offence," it said.

The agency also said that the "callousness" of the Ansal brothers led to 59 people being trapped and suffocated to death in the theatre.

A two-judge bench of justices T S Thakur and Gyan Sudha Misra (since retired) had in a March 5, 2014 order differed on the quantum of sentence for Ansal brothers -- Sushil, 76, and Gopal, 67.

While Justice Thakur had retained the one-year jail term awarded by Delhi High Court in 2008, Justice Misra had awarded the maximum punishment of two years with a rider that it can be reduced to the period already undergone behind bars on payment of Rs 100 crore as fine collectively by them.

After this, the matter was referred to the bench of Justices A R Dave, Kurian Joseph and Adarsh Kumar Goel, which enhanced the sentence to the maximum period of two years under Section 304-A (causing death by negligence) of IPC if they failed to pay the fine amount.

While Sushil has spent over five months in prison, Gopal was in jail for over four months immediately after the tragedy.

The three-judge bench had also said that on the principle of parity, the case of Gopal will stand on the same footing as that of Sushil.

Fifty-nine people, trapped in the balcony of the theatre in South Delhi, had died of asphyxia following the fire and over 100 were injured in the subsequent stampede on June 13, 1997 during the screening of Bollywood film 'Border'.

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First Published: Jan 08 2016 | 9:42 PM IST

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