Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
India

My Love Story Is Like Veer-Zara, Says Man Wrongly Jailed For 14 Years

IANS, 25 Jun, 2018 11:58 AM
  • My Love Story Is Like Veer-Zara, Says Man Wrongly Jailed For 14 Years
She was waiting for him as he stepped out of jail after 14 years, quite like the picture perfect ending of many Hindi films. In a life upended by allegations of terror and prolonged imprisonment before acquittal, it's his love story that helped him cut through layers of pain, says Mohammed Aamir Khan.
 
 
The romance still holds the allure of fiction for Mr Aamir, who was falsely charged as the main accused in 20 bomb blasts between December 1996 and December 1997 in Delhi, Rohtak, Sonepat and Ghaziabad, killing five people.
 
 
"Alia did not give up on me. I keep telling people that our love-story is the real-life version of Shah Rukh Khan and Preity Zinta's 'Veer Zara'," Mr Aamir told PTI, recalling the Bollywood hit film about a Pakistani girl and an imprisoned Indian man who reunite after spending decades apart.
 
 
Mr Aamir, who was recently granted Rs. 5 lakh compensation by the National Human Rights Commission, a first of its kind, to help him pick up the pieces of his life, is now happily married with a four-year-old daughter.
 
 
Mr Aamir and Ms Alia's romance began over two decades ago when they went to the same tuition class in Delhi.
 
 
 
But the young love was cut-short on a cold February night in 1998, when Mr Aamir, then an 18-year-old student, was "kidnapped" by the police from a street in Old Delhi.
 
 
Fourteen years later in 2012, when he walked out of Rohtak jail, as a man of 32, his childhood love was still waiting for him.  He also spent time in jails in Delhi and Ghaziabad.
 
 
After Mr Aamir was acquitted in 17 cases, the NHRC on its own took up his case in December 2015, asking the Delhi government to offer him Rs. 5 lakh as relief for his wrongful confinement as a terrorist.
 
 
"The sufferings faced by him have been long and arduous and the damage caused to him by the conduct of the State authorities is immense and exemplary," the commission had observed.
 
 
During his tenure in prison, his father died and his mother was paralysed, unable to speak following a brain haemorrhage.
 
 
"After having lost my father, I was happy I could at least serve my mother during her final years. The only regret is I couldn't hear her call me 'beta', and could not eat food cooked by her," he said.
 
 
His mother passed away in 2015.
 
 
NHRC said the compensation was aimed at helping Mr Aamir cope with the personal losses as well as to offer him an opportunity to start his life afresh.
 
 
As thankful as he is on receiving the compensation, a part of which he used for his mother's treatment, to pay off debts and to rebuild his life, no amount of money can restore the 14 prime years he had lost, he said.
 
 
"I began from minus zero, I had an open field. I was relieved, but there were a lot of hardships -- I was scared how the society would treat me, will I get a job, will anybody talk to me," Mr Aamir, who now lives in Old Delhi's Azad Market, said.
 
 
While it was too late for him to realise his adolescent dream of becoming a pilot, he found refuge in the socio-cultural organisation Anhad after his release.
 
 
He is currently employed with Delhi-based Aman Biradari - Centre For Equity Studies, where he works on projects to promote a "secular, peaceful, just and humane world".
 
 
"My biggest concern was whether I would be able to leave behind my past and live a life of dignity, but thankfully first Anhad and then Aman Biradari gave me employment opportunities," he said.
 
 
He also wishes to use some amount of the relief money to create rehabilitation options for individuals like him who have been wrongfully incarcerated.
 
 
"I feel that innocent people who are put behind bars in the name of militancy, whose lives are wasted away in prisons, and are then finally acquitted by court are in dire need of being rehabilitated.
 
 
"There is a scheme for rehabilitation of surrendered militants, but there should be a policy for innocent people like me too," he said.
 
 
Looking back on his life, he said it was the strength and courage of the women in his life -- his mother and Ms Alia that encouraged him to move on.
 
 
After his father passed away, his mother braved the overwhelming world of the prisons to meet her son and went to the court for his hearings.
 
 
And, Ms Alia's life was no less arduous than his.
 
 
"Hers was a lonely struggle. She did not even know if I would be released at all. But, she continued to have faith in my innocence and waited."
 
 
The two wanted to get married soon after Mr Aamir's release but Ms Alia's family had their reservations.
 
 
"Her family knew I was a nice person, but with me came the tag of a prisoner. They would say, 'what will we tell our relatives -- that we married off our daughter to a prisoner'?"

MORE India ARTICLES

Ghalib Guru, Son of Afzal Guru, Gets Distinction In JK Class 12th Board Exams, Wants to Become a Doc

Ghalib Guru, Son of Afzal Guru, Gets Distinction In JK Class 12th Board Exams, Wants to Become a Doc
Parliament attack convict Afzal Guru's son Galib Guru on Thursday passed the higher secondary school examination conducted by Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education, with a distinction.

Ghalib Guru, Son of Afzal Guru, Gets Distinction In JK Class 12th Board Exams, Wants to Become a Doc

Varnika Kundu Stalking Case: Punjab And Haryana HC Grants Bail To Accused Vikas Barala

Varnika Kundu Stalking Case: Punjab And Haryana HC Grants Bail To Accused Vikas Barala
The Punjab and Haryana High Court on Thursday granted bail to Vikas Barala, son of Haryana BJP chief Subhash Barala, in a stalking case.

Varnika Kundu Stalking Case: Punjab And Haryana HC Grants Bail To Accused Vikas Barala

Can't Stay Patanjali Toilet Cleaner Ad That Allegedly Mocks Harpic: Delhi HC- WATCH

Can't Stay Patanjali Toilet Cleaner Ad That Allegedly Mocks Harpic: Delhi HC- WATCH
UK-based Reckitt Benckiser said the Patanjali toilet cleaner advertisement mocked Harpic’s ad campaign.

Can't Stay Patanjali Toilet Cleaner Ad That Allegedly Mocks Harpic: Delhi HC- WATCH

In A First, Woman Lawyer To Be Directly Promoted As Supreme Court Judge

In A First, Woman Lawyer To Be Directly Promoted As Supreme Court Judge
Collegium Also Clears K M Joseph As Judge Of Top Court

In A First, Woman Lawyer To Be Directly Promoted As Supreme Court Judge

New SIT, Headed by Justice SN Dhingra, to Supervise Probe in 186 Anti-Sikh Riot Cases Set Up

New SIT, Headed by Justice SN Dhingra, to Supervise Probe in 186 Anti-Sikh Riot Cases Set Up
The Supreme Court on Thursday set up a three-member special investigation team (SIT) headed by former Delhi High Court judge Justice S N Dhingra to supervise further probe into 186 anti-Sikh riot cases.

New SIT, Headed by Justice SN Dhingra, to Supervise Probe in 186 Anti-Sikh Riot Cases Set Up

A First At Republic Day Parade: Women BSF Bikers To Display Daredevilry

A First At Republic Day Parade: Women BSF Bikers To Display Daredevilry
Men performing biking stunts at Republic Day functions is history. The BSF has now trained 113 women bikers who will be riding on 26 350 CC Royal Enfield motorcycles to perform acrobatics and daredevil stunts at this Republic Day parade.

A First At Republic Day Parade: Women BSF Bikers To Display Daredevilry