Park Street gang rape case: 10 yrs to all 3

Park Street gang rape case: 10 yrs to all 3
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Three men convicted in the 2012 Park Street gang rape case were sentenced to 10 years of rigorous imprisonment and ordered to pay a fine of Rs 1 lakh each by a sessions court on Friday after the prosecution did not seek life imprisonment for them as is normally done.

 Naser Khan, Sumit Bajaj and Ruman KhanKolkata: Three men convicted in the 2012 Park Street gang rape case were sentenced to 10 years of rigorous imprisonment and ordered to pay a fine of Rs 1 lakh each by a sessions court on Friday after the prosecution did not seek life imprisonment for them as is normally done.

More than three years after the incident shocked the nation, the court on Thursday held Ruman Khan (32), Sumit Bajaj (34) and Naser Khan (32) guilty of the crime. Two other men accused in the case, Kader Khan and Mohammed Ali, remain at large and are yet to be tried in court.

Judge Chiranjib Bhattacharya pronounced the minimum sentence of 10 years of imprisonment under section 326 (2G) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), but said an additional six months would be added to the term if the fine was not paid. Ruman and Naser were also convicted under sections 506 and 323 of the IPC, and were sentenced to six months and a fine of Rs 15,000 each. The sentences are concurrent.

Chief minister Mamata Banerjee had initially alleged that the incident was staged to malign her government. One of her party MPs even said the incident was a deal gone awry between the woman and her clients. Damayanti Sen, then joint commissioner (crime), Kolkata police, led the investigation and apprehended three of the accused. As many as 45 witnesses were examined in the case. Sen was later transferred as DIG (training) to Barrackpore, a post considered low-profile in police circles.

The victim, Suzette Jordan, was an Anglo-Indian mother of two, who came out to fight for justice publicly. Jordan died in March this year of multi-organ failure due to an illness. Chief public prosecutor Tamal Mukherjee told the media outside court that he did not plead for life imprisonment considering the family background of the convicts and their age.

Former Supreme Court judge Ashok Ganguly said Mukherjee’s move was “unprecedented”. “He should have asked for maximum punishment. Why he did not do that I cannot understand. I am surprised,” Ganguly said. Samir Ganguly, a retired police officer, agreed that the public prosecutor’s decision was not normal practice.

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