Friday, December 24, 2010

Binayak Sen Sentenced

Binayak Sen, 2 others get life for sedition for helping Naxals


Rights activist Binayak Sen, Naxal ideologue Narayan Sanyal and Kolkata businessman Piyush Guha were today convicted for sedition and sentenced to life imprisonment for colluding with Maoists to establish a network to fight the state.

Additional district and sessions judge BP Verma held the trio, who were present in the jam-packed courtroom, guilty under provisions of section 124A (sedition)and 120 B (conspiracy) of IPC and Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act.

58-year-old Sen, a paediatrician by training and vice-president of People's Union of Civil Liberties, had been accused by the prosecution of acting as courier for Sanyal, who was in jail, by carrying his messages and letters to the underground Maoists.

Sen was arrested on May 14, 2007 from Bilaspur and was in jail for two years before being granted bail by the Supreme Court in May last year.

Sanyal, 67, was arrested in Khammam in Andhra Pradesh in January 2006, while Guha, 35, was nabbed a year later in May. Both have been in jail with the prosecution having charged them with helping Maoists to set up a network.

Mahendra Dubey, Sen's lawyer, said they will appeal against the verdict. "This kind of judgement was not expected by us," he said.

All the three were sentenced to life imprisonment under sections 124A and 120(B) of IPC. The trio were also found guilty under Section 8(1) of Chhattisgarh Special Public Security Act and awarded two years imprisonment and a fine of Rs1,000.

They were sentenced to one year imprisonment and Rs1000 fine under section 8(2) of the state Act, to three years prison term and a fine of Rs1000 under section 8(3) of that Act and to five years imprisonment and fine of Rs1000 under its Section 8(5), Dubey said.

All the three were also found guilty under provisions of Prevention of Unlawful Activities Act and sentenced upto five years jail term and a fine of Rs 1,000 each. Sanyal was also awarded 10 years imprisonment and a fine of Rs 2,000 under Section 20 of the Act.

The sentences will run concurrently, Dubey said.

Sen's wife Elina and rights activists expressed "shock" and "disappointment" over the verdict.


To say that I am disappointed with the judgement is to be an understatement.
It is downright unjust.
Takes you back to the days of the British Raj when our freedom fighters were sentenced without proper trial.
Our present judges are just following the British example.
Here is an educated man who is being falsely implicated and the judges allow it quietly.
It is no wonder, the Maoist take the law into their own hands as they know they cannot expect justice from the existing system.
Then PC invites them for talks.

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