JAIPUR: An Indian court Wednesday handed down a rare guilty verdict against three Hindu radicals over a shrine bombing, but cleared the alleged mastermind of the attack initially blamed on...
March 08, 2017
JAIPUR: An Indian court Wednesday handed down a rare guilty verdict against three Hindu radicals over a shrine bombing, but cleared the alleged mastermind of the attack initially blamed on militant groups.
Devendra Gupta and Bhavesh Patel were convicted in a special court in Rajasthan over their roles in the 2007 bombing of Ajmer shrine, one of the holiest sites of Islam in India.
A third man, who was shot dead in the months after the attack, was found guilty posthumously.
The trio was convicted of charges related to explosives and conspiracy to commit unlawful acts over the strike that left three dead and at least 15 injured, the men’s lawyer Jagdish Rana told reporters outside the Jaipur court.
Their sentences will be handed down on March 16.
Naba Kumar Sarkar, the alleged ringleader behind the religiously motivated attack, was among seven Hindu radicals acquitted after prosecutor’s failed to prove their guilt.
Sarkar, better known by his nickname Swami Aseemanand, remains in prison pending trial over his role in two separate bomb attacks -- one on a mosque and another on a Pakistan-bound train that together killed nearly 75 people.
The landmark judgement against the trio over the shrine bombing is the first successful conviction of Hindu militants in recent memory.
The prominent right-wing Hindu group bears considerable influence in India, and is the ideological fountainhead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ruling nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party.