Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
India

Gujarat Riots Accused Brought From London; Sent To Jail

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Oct, 2016 01:40 PM
    An accused in a post-Godhra riots case in Ode village of Anand district of Gujarat was brought from London on Wednesday, where he was arrested, and produced before a local court, which remanded him in 14-day judicial custody.
     
    Samir Patel, who had escaped to UK after jumping bail, was brought to India in the wee hours of Wednesday by the Special Investigation Team (SIT) probing the massacre. Patel became the first person to be sent back from Britain 24 years after India and the UK signed an extradition treaty.
     
    Later in the day, the 40-year-old was produced before Additional Sessions Judge R T Panchal, who sent him to judicial custody for two weeks. Patel has been lodged in Anand sub-jail.
     
    He was arrested in West London in August by Scotland Yard following a Red Corner Notice issued against him by Indian authorities in the case in which 23 people from the minority community were killed during the riots.
     
    Three members of the SIT had left for London on October 12 to bring him to India.
     
    His extradition order was signed by UK Home Secretary Amber Rudd on September 22 and the "surrender arrangements" were finalised for his departure.
     
    Two other accused in the case, Natu Patel and Rakesh Patel, still remain at large.
     
    The massacre at Ode took place on March 1, 2002, when 23 people, including nine women and as many children of the minority community were burnt to death in a house by a mob of over 1,500 following the Godhra train burning incident.
     
    The next day, four more persons were killed in a different locality in the same village.
     
    In its verdict delivered on April 9, 2012, a Special Court had convicted 23 people and acquitted as many in the Ode riots case.
     
    The Ode episode is one of the nine riots cases being investigated by the Supreme Court-appointed SIT.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Punjab Orders Alternate Arrangements For Border Area Students

    Cheema said that students who have been shifted to relief camps would get the education in the nearby schools.

    Punjab Orders Alternate Arrangements For Border Area Students

    Indian Citizens Urged To Shift To Machine-Readable Passports

    Indian Citizens Urged To Shift To Machine-Readable Passports
    The Regional Passport Office (RPO) in Mumbai has asked citizens to immediately do away with their handwritten passports, saying not switching to machine-readable ones will cause them problem in getting visas.

    Indian Citizens Urged To Shift To Machine-Readable Passports

    Pak PM Nawaz Sharif's 'Knighthood' Challenged In Lahore High Court

    An honourary title given to Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif by Queen Elizabeth II was today challenged in the Lahore High Court on the grounds that it was a "mark of slavery" and against the "national interest".

    Pak PM Nawaz Sharif's 'Knighthood' Challenged In Lahore High Court

    Pakistan Channels Showing Morphed Clips Of Casualties, Say Army

    Pakistan Channels Showing Morphed Clips Of Casualties, Say Army
    Some Pakistani channels were playing "morphed" video clips showing Indian casualties in surgical strikes against terrorist launch pads across the LoC as only one soldier involved in the operation received "minor injury" during exfiltration, army sources said on Friday.

    Pakistan Channels Showing Morphed Clips Of Casualties, Say Army

    Granny Of Chandu Babulal Chavan, Indian Soldier Captured By Pakistan, Dies Of Shock

    Granny Of Chandu Babulal Chavan, Indian Soldier Captured By Pakistan, Dies Of Shock
    The aged grandmother of Indian soldier Chandu Babulal Chavan, who was captured by Pakistan troops, died of apparent shock on Friday on hearing of the news, a relative said.

    Granny Of Chandu Babulal Chavan, Indian Soldier Captured By Pakistan, Dies Of Shock

    It's Not War Yet, But Punjab Border Villages Face War-like Situation

    It's Not War Yet, But Punjab Border Villages Face War-like Situation
    There has been no gunfire, no alert sirens and no fighter jets dropping bombs. It is not war time yet but tens of thousands of villagers in Punjab's border belt with Pakistan are already experiencing a war-like situation.

    It's Not War Yet, But Punjab Border Villages Face War-like Situation