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Home ministry rejects 26/11 terrorist Kasab's mercy plea

veekysingh

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NEW DELHI: Acting swiftly on 26/11 Mumbai terror attack case convict Ajmal Amir Kasab's mercy petition, the Union home ministry has rejected his plea of commuting death penalty and sent the file to President Pranab Mukherjee for taking the final decision.

In an unprecedented move, the home ministry -- which took years in sending mercy petition files of other convicts on death row -- has sent Kasab's file to Rashtrapati Bhavan within three weeks of getting the note of rejection from Maharashtra governor K Sankaranarayan.

"Since the state government and the governor had already rejected Kasab's mercy petition, the home ministry need not send it again to state. It simply processed it at its end taking state's advice and sent it to the President for taking final call", said a senior home ministry official.

The official said it was now upto the President to take a decision.

"Since Article 72 of the Constitution doesn't prescribe any time limit, it is entirely upto President as to when he takes his call --- whether to accept Kasab's mercy petition or reject it", said the official.

The petition of the Pakistani Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorist, addressed to President Pranab Mukherjee in Urdu which was converted into Hindi, had first reached the state government early last month.

The state government had then sent it to the governor who subsequently rejected it.

The Supreme Court had on August 29 confirmed the death sentence, awarded to Kasab for waging war against India in which 166 persons were killed and more than 300 were injured.

Kasab was the only terrorist captured alive in the November 26 Mumbai terror attacks.
 
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Thats very good. Well done Shinde ji...not!
 
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I firmly believe that the death penalty should be abolished. Imprisonment for life in solitary confinement with hard labor is more of a punishment than death by hanging which takes less than a minute. And you don't make martyrs and heroes out of them by awarding them the death sentence.
 
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This was to be expected. Contrary to what many believe here, this guy's goose was cooked when the SC confirmed the death sentence. An execution, either now or closer to the election will give Congress a chance to show that they are "tough" on terrorism & also will, thanks to our media, erase almost all other things from our people's already very short term memories.

I firmly believe that the death penalty should be abolished. Imprisonment for life in solitary confinement with hard labor is more of a punishment than death by hanging which takes less than a minute. And you don't make martyrs and heroes out of them by awarding them the death sentence.

No, you just allow the terrorists an opportunity to kidnap more Indians & ask for an exchange.:hitwall:
 
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This was to be expected. Contrary to what many believe here, this guy's goose was cooled when the SC confirmed the death sentence. An execution, either now or closer to the election will give Congress a chance to show that they are "tough" on terrorism & also will, thanks to our media, erase almost all other things from our people's already very short term memories.




No, you just allow the terrorists an opportunity to kidnap more Indians & ask for an exchange.:hitwall:

+1 to that. Kasab's time on Planet Earth is running out. But there is no particular reason to execute the sentence in a tearing hurry. Some more "fish still have to be canned". After that he can be disposed off.
 
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Don't be happy so soon. According to Press Information Bureau the ministry has not "rejected" the mercy application but only "processed" the same and sent to the president
 
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I firmly believe that the death penalty should be abolished. Imprisonment for life in solitary confinement with hard labor is more of a punishment than death by hanging which takes less than a minute.
You know..cost of keeping him alive is 53 crores INR just for 3-4 years!!! :hitwall: And you are talking about life term! :disagree: And if death sentence is abolished, every sob who dosent have a penny will attack some city, kill a couple of hundred people and enjoy top security with free food,bed and electricy. So..without any delay, hanging that bastard is most appropriate. And yeah..he agreed to wage jihad against India for just 1.5 lakh rupees!
 
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Death is entirely discriminatory

A life term for Kodnani and the hangman’s noose for Kasab show the arbitrariness in the judicial administration of capital punishment
Judge Jyotsna Yagnik’s invocation of human dignity while not awarding the death penalty in the Naroda-Patiya massacre case and the Supreme Court’s expression of helplessness while confirming the death penalty of Ajmal Kasab — sentenced in the 26/11 terror attack — go to the heart of the constitutional unviability of the death penalty. We would struggle to make any meaningful distinction in the culpability we attach to these two crimes but our collective response, in terms of the punishment they must receive, has been qualitatively different. While it will be debated whether it was appropriate for a trial judge to invoke concerns of human dignity at the sentencing stage, judge Yagnik’s judgment has also inadvertently demonstrated the inherent unfairness of the death penalty. One can’t help wonder about Kasab’s fate if he had appeared before judge Yagnik rather than judge M.L. Tahiliani. And it is precisely that unpredictability and inconsistency in the judicial administration of the death penalty that is at the heart of the principled objections to the death penalty.

DIFFERENT RESPONSES

There has been very little discussion on why principled arguments against the death penalty should not apply in Kasab’s case. Raju Ramachandran, the amicus in Kasab’s case, did a terrific job in attempting to get the Supreme Court to commute Kasab’s death sentence but there has been very little else. As a nation and a society we seem to have quietly accepted the death penalty for Kasab despite all the objections that have been raised about the death penalty in the past. Kasab’s case is a significant setback for the move towards complete abolition of the death penalty in India. It was, in many ways, the perfect case for the death penalty. A profoundly hurt and grieving society, the guilt of the accused established through damning photographs and videos, wounded nationalism and the possible involvement of state actors across the border all contributed towards making Kasab’s case a strong validation of the need for the death penalty. It is as though we are acknowledging that there will be moments in our life as a nation where we will need to satisfy our need for collective revenge. A need satisfied with the gloss of the rule of law.

On what basis, then, do we not demand the death penalty for those who masterminded and led the carnage in Naroda-Patiya? Maya Kodnani as an MLA was supposed to represent and protect the interests of those in her constituency and not lead a mob of genocidaires to torture, rape and kill many helpless Muslims. Despite that, our acceptability of the punishments handed down in the Kasab and the Naroda-Patiya cases has proceeded along very different lines. There will certainly be no sustained demand for the death penalty for Maya Kodnani and Babu Bajrangi but there is widespread satisfaction at the confirmation of death penalty for Kasab. That this qualitative difference in our perception of the two crimes has found reflection in the judicial administration of the death penalty is most unfortunate with the invocation of human dignity in one case and no meaningful engagement with it in another.

The issue is not whether the death penalty offends human dignity or not. As a polity, we have unfortunately decided that it does not. The primary issue is whether it is possible to develop a model of administering the death penalty that is consistent and non-arbitrary. Judge Yagnik chose not to impose the death penalty because of her commitment to the position that the human dignity of all convicts must be respected. Judge Tahiliani either does not subscribe to that view or believes that it is inappropriate for a trial judge to take such considerations into account. Either way, it exposes why the ‘rarest of the rare’ framework cannot work in a fair and consistent manner. It ultimately leaves significant scope for judicial discretion where all sorts of factors creep in, and has ensured that comparing the death penalty in India to a lottery would not be an exaggeration. An analysis of death penalty cases in India from 1950-2006 by Amnesty International confirms that administering the death penalty has been an arbitrary exercise. Essentially, it was observed that in many similar circumstances some convicts were awarded the death penalty and others were not.

In the pursuit of consistent application of the death penalty, is the solution then to completely remove judicial discretion? Should we develop a list of very specific crimes where the death penalty is automatically awarded? Before it was found to be unconstitutional, Section 303 of the Indian Penal Code provided that an individual who committed murder while serving a life sentence would be automatically sentenced to death. Emphasising the importance of individual sentencing, five judges of the Supreme Court in Mithu v. State of Punjab found the automatic sentencing to be arbitrary and unjust. The inability of the sentencing judges to take into consideration individual circumstances while deciding the sentence, the judges felt, would cause grave injustice to the accused.

Achieving a balance between judicial discretion and individualised sentencing has proved to be an impossible task. The Supreme Court has tried to address this by developing guidelines in cases like Bachan Singh and Santosh Bariyar without much success. A damning indictment of such attempts has been the recent appeal by 14 eminent judges to the President to commute the death sentence of 13 convicts.

It is stated in the appeal that the Supreme Court itself has admitted to the wrongful administration of the death penalty in these 13 cases and that it would be a grave miscarriage of justice to not commute their sentence. It is time for the Supreme Court to recognise that it is attempting the impossible by trying to achieve a consistent application of the death penalty while maintaining the discretion of judges.

This debate between consistent application of the death penalty and individualised sentencing was at its peak in the U.S. Supreme Court in the 1970s. In Furman v. Georgia (1972), the U.S. Supreme Court raised constitutional concerns about the discriminatory and arbitrary use of the death penalty. After the judgment in Furman, many States responded with new guidelines for imposing the death penalty, including some mandatory death penalty schemes. While the attempt of the States to provide guidelines was upheld, the mandatory death penalty schemes were struck down in Gregg v. Georgia in 1976. However, the U.S. experience with ‘guided discretion’ since then has been disastrous and has been documented in great detail by the Steiker Report (2009) commissioned by the American Law Institute (ALI).

‘TINKERING WITH THE MACHINERY’

The ALI’s model framework for the administration of death penalty developed in 1962 provided the basis for the death penalty statutes that the U.S. Supreme Court found acceptable in Gregg. However, after the Steiker Report came to the conclusion that the death penalty continued to be administered in an arbitrary manner, the ALI deleted the death penalty provisions from its Model Penal Code in December 2009 with no proposal to introduce another framework. Justice Harry Blackmun’s judicial view on the death penalty while on the Supreme Court holds an important lesson for India’s judges in the Supreme Court. Appointed by President Nixon, he started out upholding the constitutionality of the death penalty including mandatory death sentences in the 1970s. Until a few months before his retirement in August 1994, Justice Blackmun was a supporter of the death penalty by upholding many attempts to achieve its non-arbitrary application. But in Callins v. Collins in February 1994, Justice Blackmun concluded that efforts of the U.S. Supreme Court over two decades since Furman to ensure fair and non-arbitrary application of the death penalty had proved to be futile. Finding the death penalty to be ‘fraught with arbitrariness, discrimination, caprice, and mistake’, Justice Blackmun revoked his support for the death penalty by declaring that he would no longer ‘tinker with the machinery of death’. The Indian Supreme Court must recognise the impossibility of what it is trying to achieve.
 
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NEW DELHI: Acting swiftly on 26/11 Mumbai terror attack case convict Ajmal Amir Kasab's mercy petition, the Union home ministry has rejected his plea of commuting death penalty and sent the file to President Pranab Mukherjee for taking the final decision.

There are 20 or 21 plea already pending. Most famous plea is from Afjal guru side , which is pending fom 2006( this is 2012 .. ) and president have to clear all pending plea before taking any decision on kasab plea..
 
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I firmly believe that the death penalty should be abolished. Imprisonment for life in solitary confinement with hard labor is more of a punishment than death by hanging which takes less than a minute. And you don't make martyrs and heroes out of them by awarding them the death sentence.

Although I believe that the death penalty should be abolished too, I prefer retaining it for people like Ajmal Kasab. What he did was terrorism, war against state and pre medidated mass murder of innocents. This guy shouldnt be allowed to live. These terrorists wanna die anyway, but atleast his death will bring some closure to the ones that lost loved ones. He hasnt done anything positive his entire life, and he came to India to die, so while we give him his request, atleast his death brings a sigh of relief to many that lost their sons and daughters in those horrific shooting incidents.
 
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Its not the question if death penalty should be abolished or not.The question should be asked if it is applied uniformly?If kasab deserves death penalty then so do Maya Kodnani and Babu Bajrangi.
 
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saale ko maar do ASAP !!:woot:

Its not the question if death penalty should be abolished or not.The question should be asked if it is applied uniformly?If kasab deserves death penalty then so do Maya Kodnani and Babu Bajrangi.

No one says anything about Indian Supreme Court. They are men of impeccable integrity !!!
 
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Main to kehta hun usko free kar do aur pehle announce kardo ki kahan chod rahe ho, baaki uska faisla aur punishment hum de denge. Itna maarenge ki agle 10 saal tak koi nahin aayega Indians ko maarne. :D
 
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Its not the question if death penalty should be abolished or not.The question should be asked if it is applied uniformly?If kasab deserves death penalty then so do Maya Kodnani and Babu Bajrangi.

You are not wrong in that assertion. I have been extremely uncomfortable with the "rarest of rare" business since it is completely arbitrary & depends on the interpretation of individual judges. I much prefer a more clear cut definition of what constitutes a death sentence case. Premeditated murder for gain, terrorism, honour killings & planned rioting(as in the case you mentioned) must be given mandatory death sentences with no chances of obfuscation. Your point is valid.

There are 20 or 21 plea already pending. Most famous plea is from Afjal guru side , which is pending fom 2006( this is 2012 .. ) and president have to clear all pending plea before taking any decision on kasab plea..

There is no queue system in death sentence cases as you will shortly find out. There is absolutely no way that the government is going in to the next election without this chap having been executed.
 
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There is no queue system in death sentence cases as you will shortly find out. There is absolutely no way that the government is going in to the next election without this chap having been executed.

However, that is upto the president, and not the GoI. The president is supposed to be a constitutional office, so technically he can do it at his leisure, without bothering about the wishes of the govt. However, since the president happens to be an ex member of the present govt, I'm sure he will also want the execution before election.

So it looks like it's GOODBYE, KASAB, and enjoy non-existence!:wave:
 
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