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NHRC team reaches Vadodara, meets police commissioner
Vadodara, July 08: Senior officials of National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), who arrived here this morning to examine documents pertaining to the Best Bakery case and the judgement awarded by a fast track court, held a closed door meeting with city police commissioner Sudhir Sinha.
Vadodara, July 08: Senior officials of National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), who arrived here this morning to examine documents pertaining to the Best Bakery case and the judgement awarded by a fast track court, held a closed door meeting with city police commissioner Sudhir Sinha.
The meeting lasted for almost an hour, according to P G J
Nampoothri, special rapporteur for the Commission in Gujarat,
who is accompanying Bhari Hoake, registrar of law and Sudhir
Chaudhary, DIG (Investigations), the NHRC team members from
New Delhi.
Nampoothri told a news agency that the team, however, has no plans to visit the Best Bakery premises located in Hanuman Tekri area, where 12 persons were burnt alive in the bakery and two went missing on March 01, 2002 during a bandh call in the post-Godhra communal riots. On June 27, a fast track court here had acquitted 21 accused in this case due to lack of evidence, mainly due to witnesses turning hostile.
The NHRC members are presently conducting a meeting with district and sessions Judge J C Upadhyay at the court. They are also likely to meet senior police officials during the day-long visit.
The acquittal of the accused in the bakery carnage has generated a lot of heat with NHRC chairman A S Anand terming it as `miscarraige of justice' even as the key witness Zahira Sheikh, who had turned hostile during the trial, stated in Mumbai yesterday that she had been "threatened", and demanded re-opening of the case in a higher court outside Gujarat. Bureau Report
Nampoothri told a news agency that the team, however, has no plans to visit the Best Bakery premises located in Hanuman Tekri area, where 12 persons were burnt alive in the bakery and two went missing on March 01, 2002 during a bandh call in the post-Godhra communal riots. On June 27, a fast track court here had acquitted 21 accused in this case due to lack of evidence, mainly due to witnesses turning hostile.
The NHRC members are presently conducting a meeting with district and sessions Judge J C Upadhyay at the court. They are also likely to meet senior police officials during the day-long visit.
The acquittal of the accused in the bakery carnage has generated a lot of heat with NHRC chairman A S Anand terming it as `miscarraige of justice' even as the key witness Zahira Sheikh, who had turned hostile during the trial, stated in Mumbai yesterday that she had been "threatened", and demanded re-opening of the case in a higher court outside Gujarat. Bureau Report