'Can't make death row convicts wait endlessly'
New Delhi, Sept. 25 -- The Union government on Wednesday pressed the Supreme Court to expedite hearing on its plea seeking stricter timelines for death row convicts to avail legal remedies and for executions to be carried out within seven days after rejection of a mercy petition.
Appearing before a bench of justices Vikram Nath, Sandeep Mehta and NV Anjaria, Additional Solicitor General (ASG) KM Nataraj said the Centre wanted certain modifications to the 2014 Shatrughan Chauhan judgment so that the framework for death penalty cases factored in the rights and agony of victims. In Shatrughan Chauhan's case, the top court held that delays beyond of the convicts' control qualify as grounds for commuting the death penalty, holding that the pain and suffering brought on by the delay warrant commutation of sentence to life in prison.
The government's push for strict timelines on executions came on a day when, in a separate case, the same bench pulled up the Centre for sitting over Balwant Singh Rajoana's mercy plea and failing to execute him even 15 years after his death sentence was confirmed, despite there being no stay from the court.
Rajoana was sentenced to death in connection with the 1995 assassination of former Punjab chief minister Beant Singh.
Pushing for righter timelines ASG Nataraj told the bench: "The government is seeking modifications in the earlier judgment to ensure that the process does not continue endlessly with mercy petitions, review and curative pleas. Victims also suffer when executions are delayed."
"It (execution) will prolong...It will keep on going on by filing application after application. Ultimately, we will not be able to do anything. Victims will suffer. Shatrughan Chauhan (judgment) comes in the way of many cases, we want some clarification," the ASG said. At this, the bench said it would hear the matter on October 8, clarifying that no adjournments would be entertained.
The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) had moved the modification application in 2020 when multiple legal remedies filed one after the other by the four convicts in the 2012 Delhi gangrape and murder case delayed their execution.
They were eventually hanged in March 2020 after the Supreme Court, in a midnight sitting, dismissed their last petition. In its application, the Centre urged the court to declare that curative petitions must be filed only within a stipulated time after dismissal of a review petition. Additionally, it asked for a clarification that a mercy petition must be filed within seven days of issuance of a death warrant. Finally, the application sought a directive that executions take place within seven days of rejection of a mercy plea, regardless of pending proceedings by co-convicts. The government argued that the Shatrughan Chauhan ruling, while safeguarding convicts from inordinate delay, "does not take into account irreparable mental trauma, agony, upheaval and derangement of the victims and their family members." ASG Nataraj stressed that the Centre was not pressing for "outer limits" on deciding mercy petitions, but wanted clarity on timelines to prevent abuse of the process. If each co-convict files petitions separately, executions get stalled indefinitely, he said. The application said convicts in heinous crimes such as terrorism, rape and murder "take the judicial process for a ride" under the garb of Article 21 (right to life). It emphasised that public interest and the deterrent effect of capital punishment must not be undermined.While the Shatrughan Chauhan judgment held that undue delay in executing death penalty has a "dehumanising effect" and laid down guidelines to safeguard convicts, including a minimum 14-day notice period before execution, the Centre has maintained that these guidelines are entirely "accused-centric" and require balancing with the interests of victims and society....
To read the full article or to get the complete feed from this publication, please
Contact Us.