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De-coding the historic Bilkis Bano verdict

On a crisp January day in 2024, the gavel fell on a momentous decision. With poetic authority, Justice B.V. Nagarathna penned a compelling 251-page judgment that echoed through the hallowed halls of justice. In a dramatic turn of events, eleven convicts in the Bilkis Bano gang rape case were called to return to their prison confines within two weeks, as remission orders granting their premature release were swiftly set aside by a resolute two-judge Bench of the Supreme Court. Justice Ujwal Bhuyan was the second judge. This was after 11 convicts has been precipitatiously released on August 15, 2022, an act that generated nationwide outrage and protest.

The January 8 order came on a batch of petitions challenging the release. Along with the writ petition filed by Bilkis Yakub Rasool (Bilkis Bano) in November 2022, several other petitions were also previously filed. These were by senior women politicians’ activists and journalists.

Citing the public interest, safety of the society, the future consequences of the remission order, and a protection of women’s rights, these petitions held their ground. The Supreme Court, primarily addressing Bilkis Bano’s petition, chose not to rule specifically on maintainability calling it an “academic” point.

The background

The brutality of communal violence experienced in February 2002 in Gujarat –a widespread and shocking impact for thousands –seminally changed the life of Bilkis Bano. Carrying her three year old daughter, Saleha, as she was fleeing for her life from the small town of Randhikpur where she had been born, a mob –many of whom she recognised – fell upon her and several others from her family including her mother and sister—smashed her child’s head and raped her and others. She was left only because she was unconscious, believed to be dead. Of the total lives lost which were 14, seven were Bilkis’ family alone; three other women were also raped before being killed.

Bilkis was one of the sole survivors and courageously fought—for 22 long years to obtain substantive justice. When the local police closed down her complaint, replete with details and filed an ‘A’ summary report (closure report) and this was shockingly accepted by the local magistrate, she, assisted by a band of activists and lawyers, approached the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC). In 2002, it was former Chief Justice JS Verma, who had led an intrepid investigation into the Gujarat 20002 carnage recommending an investigation by the Central Bureau of Investigation. By 2004, when the Supreme Court finally ordered a transfer of the trial to Mumbai, another for chief justice, Justice AS Anand was chairperson, NHRC.

Finally in 2008, a special CBI Court Judge, Judge UD Salvi convicted 11 persons for the mass targeted crimes, and their conviction was upheld by the Bombay High Court in 2017. Finally in 2019, the Supreme Court of India not only upheld this conviction but directed payment of Rs 50 lakhs in compensation, a suitable home/land to be provided by the state of Gujarat as reparation. She was also directed to be provided employment; however when she requested that her husband be employed instead since she was unlettered this direction remains unfulfilled.

Drama hit this case again in 2022. As the country was being made to “celebrate” Amrit Mahotsav –75 years of Independence from Brtish rule –on August 14, 2022, 11 of these convicts were released in celebratory fanfare by the Gujarat government, still ruled by the supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Ministers in the state government and officials of the ruling party garland and welcome these mass murderers and rapists in their midst.

Outrage all over India follows with thousands participating in signature campaigns demanding a withdrawal/cancellation of the remission. By September 2022, that is within a month three prominent women file writ petitions challenging the remission. By November 2022, Bilkis Bando herself, represented by Advocate Shobha Gupta also approaches the Supreme Court. The matter is heard at length, the Solicitor General Tushar Mehta predictably represents the Gujarat government and on January 8, 2024, the Supreme Court delivers this verdict.

How did the remission orders come to be passed?

Having spent 14 year behind the bars, convict Radheshyam Shah, appeals for consideration of remission first with the State of Gujarat where it is ruled that the appropriate government would be the government of Maharashtra. At the time, the Maharashtra government is ruled by the Maharashtra Vikas Aghadi (MVA). Not approaching Maharashtra then, he challenges this finding of jurisdiction and approaches the Supreme Court on the question. During the hearings in April-May 2022, both he as convict and the Gujarat government as respondent conceal material facts from the Supreme Court – for instance the fact that the Judge who had tried the case and convicted these men, Judge UD Salvi had vehemently opposed the remission when duly consulted; the fact that the prosecuting agency, the CBI, too, when approached by on the issue as is due, also had strongly commented against remission. This concealment of facts led to the Supreme Court in May 2022 to deem the Gujarat government/administration as being the jurisdiction to deliver a response on remission. It is this sinister concealment by the Gujarat government before the Supreme Court has led to the present order of January 8, 2024 to state that “a fraud was committed on the Supreme Court” by the Gujarat government.[1]

In a well -orchestrated move, around the same time, 10 other convicts also furnish remission pleas before the State of Gujarat, ostensibly, in compliance of Section 432 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC). And then, on August 15, 2022, during Independence Day celebrations, the Gujarat government duly delivers on this after accepting the remission applications for all 11 convicts who were sentenced to life imprisonment. The Gujarat government stated that they were granted early release in accordance with the 1992 policy, citing the ‘good conduct’ of the convicts while imprisoned. The convicts are all granted remission in reliance of the order dated August 10, 2022.

[Later media investigations reveal –following the nationwide outrage that follows their release that these convicts –serving terms in Gujarat—had been granted obscene number of days of parole by the prison authorities rendering their incarceration a joke. Advocates Shobha Gupta and Vrinda Grover had argued that they had, in fact not served their sentence. [2]Also, that in the “Committee” appointed by the Gujarat government to consider the remission applications, three dominant members were office bearers of the ruling BJP! One of the convicts was even booked in 2020 for a gender violence case while on parole! [3]]

Aptly aggrieved by this, Bilkis Yakub Rasool, being an unfortunate victim of the heinous crimes hereinabove narrated, filed the writ petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India, seeking issuance of a writ, order or direction quashing the Orders dated August 10, 2022 passed by the State of Gujarat by which the convicts in Sessions Case No.634 of 2004, Mumbai were released prematurely.

 The issues under discussion

The heart of the matter revolved around the sustainability of petitions, the power vested in the Gujarat government to provide remission, and the fundamental freedom of the convicts. The verdict ruled in favour of the petitioners on all these fronts.

The following points outline the issues in detail: 

  1. Whether the writ petition filed by the petitioner is maintainable?

 Petitioner

 Respondents

 Judgement

  1. Whether the writ petition filed as a PIL challenging the order of a remission is maintainable?

 Petitioner

o   In Petition (Crl.) No.352 of 2022, Dr. Meeran Chadha Borwankar, a former woman police officer, an ex-Indian Foreign Service bureaucrat, and an academic seek to set aside the remission Orders.

o   Subhashini Ali, a former parliamentarian, Revati Laul, an independent journalist, and Roop Rekha Verma, former Vice-Chancellor of Lucknow University, collectively file Writ Petition (Crl.) No.319 of 2022 challenging the same Orders.

o   Mahua Moitra, Member of Parliament from Krishnanagar constituency, West Bengal, files Writ Petition (Crl.) No.326 of 2022.

o   Writ Petition (Crl.) No.403 of 2022 is filed by the National Federation of Indian Women (NFIW), a women-centric organization, seeking a mandamus to revoke remission granted to respondent Nos.3 to 13

o   Asma Shafique Shaikh, a lawyer and social activist, files Writ Petition (Crl.) No.422 of 2022 seeking to quash the Orders dated 10.08.2022.

 Respondent

 Judgement

  1. Whether the Gujarat Government was competent to pass the order of remission?

 Petitioner

 Respondent

Judgement

  1. Whether the order of remission was in accordance with law?

 Petitioner

 Respondent

 Judgement

  1. What follows?

 The central question following the quashing of the remission order that arose before the Division Bench came to be, “whether the personal liberty of the convicts under Article 21 should be protected i.e. should they be allowed to continue their freedom?”

 Petitioner

 Respondents

 Judgement

 Verdict 

  1. The outcomes of other petitions were rendered redundant in regards to the present petition.
  2. The order of May 2022 with regards to the appropriate government was declared null and non est on grounds of concealment of material facts and misrepresentation of facts. It was also declared per incuriam and not to be a binding precedent.
  3. The impugned orders of remission dated August 10, 2022 were quashed
  4. The convicts were ordered to report to the concerned jailed authority

 Though victory has come Bilkis’ way again, in 2024, given that remission and the right to grant sentence is an available remedy in criminal law, there is little to prevent these convicts from now approaching the Maharashtra government. Where a more friendly government currently rules.

 (The judgement primer has been researched by CJP’s legal intern’s team including Karishma Jain)

Related:

Bilkis Bano gang rape convict shares stage with BJP MP, MLA: Gujarat

The worst from Indian courts: 2022

 

 

 [1] 432 od CRPC Section 432 of the CRPC: Power to suspend or remit sentences

[2] https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/bilkis-bano-rapists-were-out-of-jail-for-1-000s-of-days-on-parole-before-release-3440854

[3] https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/in-the-bilkis-case-parole-and-furlough-are-on-trial/articleshow/95917873.cms?from=mdr

[4] Citizens for Justice and Peace, in all its legal actions concerning survivors of 2002 Gujarat, Dhule, Maharashtra, Muzaffarnagar, Uttar Pradesh has always approached the court on behalf of and with survivors and not in isolation.