Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
India

Assamese Man Nabbed In Murder Of Kerala Dalit Woman

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Jun, 2016 12:21 PM
    A 23-year-old Assamese man has been arrested in the rape-murder of a Dalit woman law student in Kerala that grabbed national headlines for the sheer brutality of the April 28 crime and became a hot political issue during the state assembly elections.
     
    The Assamese man, identified as Amiyur ul Islam, was picked up from Tamil Nadu near the Palakkad border two days ago. According to police, forensic and other evidence has shown the man's involvement in the crime, that was being compared to the December 16, 2012 Delhi gang rape.
     
    B. Sandhya, Additional Director General of Police, who headed the probe in the Jisha murder case, on Thursday said the arrest of the accused has been recorded.
     
    "It was through an extensive probe that the accused was tracked down and finally taken into custody," Sandhya told reporters at the Aluva Police club, where the accused was brought.
     
    Reacting to news of the arrest, the woman's mother Rajeshwari said: "He should be dealt with in the manner in which he assaulted my daughter, and after that he should be hanged to death."
     
    "Not a single woman in the country should ever be made to undergo what my daughter underwent," said Rajeshwari.
     
    Earlier in the day, Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan, announcing the arrest, said in Kochi: "This is going to be a feather in the cap of the police probe team." 
     
    Sandhya led the police questioning of the suspect at Thrissur. 
     
    On Thursday evening, Islam was brought to Aluva where all the top police officers, including Sandhya, were present.
     
    According to police, two vital clues turned out to be the clinching evidence for nailing him -- the footwear which was left near Jisha's home and a photo of Islam and Jisha taken at a local studio near her house.
     
    The footwear shop owner and the studio owner identified the man, even as police concluded, from the evidence, that the crime was committed by someone known to Jisha.
     
    Islam had taken part in the construction of Jisha's home, and they were in touch and had some verbal duel over the construction.
     
    According to the information, the Assamese man had come to her home on the morning of April 28 and they had a fight. He came again in the afternoon when he was drunk and committed the crime.
     
     
    Police zeroed in on Islam after his DNA samples, checked against the saliva and blood samples found on Jisha's body, matched when the results came in on Thursday.
     
    Director General of Police Loknath Behra, who is in Mumbai, told reporters there that things are going well in the case and expressed happiness at the Chief Minister's praise of the police force.
     
    Jisha, 27, was found dead on April 28 at her home in Perumbavoor in Ernakulam by her mother Rajeshwari, who works as a casual labourer. Her body bore injuries in a way that gave rise to suspicion that she was raped before being killed.
     
    The murder attracted national headlines and became a hot topic in Kerala's election season. The Left Democratic Front (LDF) said it reflected the slide in law and order that the then ruling Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) had allowed, and promised to book the culprits within hours, if elected to power.
     
    Leader of Opposition Ramesh Chennithala said when the probe began (he was then Home Minister), and the probe team came out with a report that crucial evidence of a pair of footwear is going to be the clinching evidence, the media looked at it with disdain.
     
    "See, now the same footwear has turned out to be the crucial evidence; so it means what happened during our time was on the right track," said Chennithala.
     
    The LDF government, which assumed office on May 25, changed the entire team probing the case and replaced Director General of Police (DGP) T.P. Senkumar with Behra.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Sahara Chief Subrata Roy's Book From Tihar Tops Chart, Then Slips

    Sahara Chief Subrata Roy's Book From Tihar Tops Chart, Then Slips
    As the embattled Sahara chief Subrata Roy completes two years in prison, there is something he can cheer about.

    Sahara Chief Subrata Roy's Book From Tihar Tops Chart, Then Slips

    World Leaders Hail Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, David Cameron Invites Him To House Of Commons

    World Leaders Hail Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, David Cameron Invites Him To House Of Commons
    British Prime Minister David Cameron invited Ravi Shankar to address the House of Commons, the lower house of parliament, while Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull invited AoL to Australia for the next World Culture Festival.

    World Leaders Hail Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, David Cameron Invites Him To House Of Commons

    Time Not Right For My Return: Indian Business Tycoon Vijay Mallya

    Time Not Right For My Return: Indian Business Tycoon Vijay Mallya
    Mallya told the Sunday Guardian in an email interview that he had done no wrong and that he was being victimised. 

    Time Not Right For My Return: Indian Business Tycoon Vijay Mallya

    Cars And Bikes You Fancy Can Be Yours - On Rent In India

    Cars And Bikes You Fancy Can Be Yours - On Rent In India
    DRIVEN, floated by the city's largest and oldest car-rental companies, Noori Travels and 4Wheels Travels, offers a one-stop solution for all transportation needs in the self-driven and self-ride segment.

    Cars And Bikes You Fancy Can Be Yours - On Rent In India

    Why Mysore Beat Chandigarh As India's Cleanest City

    Chandigarh’s 1.05 million people generate 370 tonnes of solid waste every day. The city employs 4,085 sweepers, which is 2.65 sweepers per km of road.

    Why Mysore Beat Chandigarh As India's Cleanest City

    Refusing Skimpy Clothes Could Cost Waitresses Their Jobs, Labour Groups Warn

    Refusing Skimpy Clothes Could Cost Waitresses Their Jobs, Labour Groups Warn
    Labour groups and some restaurant owners say the Ontario Human Rights Commission's recent report on sexualized dress codes is not entirely in touch with the realities of life in the industry.

    Refusing Skimpy Clothes Could Cost Waitresses Their Jobs, Labour Groups Warn