[Uphaar Tragedy] Delhi High Court issues bailable warrant against convict PP Batra

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Synopsis

The plea filed by the Victims Association challenged the order of the lower court reducing sentence of the Ansal brothers in Uphaar tragedy evidence tampering matter.

The Delhi High Court on Tuesday issued bailable warrant against convict PP Batra for non-appearance before the court in a plea challenging the trial court's order reducing Sushil Ansal, Gopal Ansal, PP Batra and another's sentence tenure in the Uphaar tragedy case.

Their sentence had been reduced from 7 years to the sentence already undergone which was 8 months and 12 days and were thereafter released.

A bench of Justice Purushendra Kumar Kaurav issued bailable warrant against Batra as he had not appeared before the bench even when the notice had been served to him well in advance. It may be noted that Sushil Ansal, Gopal Ansal, and other convicts were present before the court today.

The bench was hearing a plea filed by the Association of Victims of Uphaar Tragedy filed through Advocate Raavi Sharma challenging the Patiala House Court order reducing the sentence of the accused in the Uphaar tragedy evidence tampering case.

The plea challenged the order wherein the sentence of Sushil Ansal, Gopal Ansal, PP Batra & DC Sharma had been reduced from 7 years simple imprisonment to the sentence already undergone (8 months & 12 days) and their release had been directed, if not required in any other case.

It may also be noted that convict Sushil Ansal has also moved a revision plea stating that the conviction and the sentence awarded were wrong. The High Court has issued notice in the same and tagged the matter along with similar cases.

The Association filed the instant plea alleging that the convicts tried to meddle with the functioning of the judicial system and that the impugned judgment failed to appreciate the gravity of the offences committed by them.

The matter pertains to the incident of 1997, wherein, at least 59 people died of asphyxiation and over 100 others were injured in a stampede after a fire broke out in Uphaar cinema hall on June 13, 1997, during the screening of JP Dutta's film 'Border'.

Sushil Ansal and Gopal Ansal and two employees among others were convicted for tampering with crucial evidence in the case. The Court had convicted all the accused under sections 409, 201, and 120B of IPC.

However, the lower court while reducing the sentence noted that "the proportionality test in criminal jurisprudence applied in the instant case by no stretch of the imagination could be applied in such a manner so as to make the appellants Sushil & Gopal Ansal suffer greater punishment for what they have actually served for commission of the offences in the main Uphaar case since that would be the realm of double jeopardy.”

It was also held that the only mitigating factor for DC Sharma was that he had already suffered punishment in the nature of dismissal from service & neither any evidence was found during the investigation against him nor any evidence was brought forth by the prosecution and the prosecution failed to establish any pecuniary benefit out of the whole episode.

Case Title: Association of Victims of Uphaar Tragedy v. State of NCT of Delhi & Ors.