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“I don’t think I did anything special (in convicting them). My judgment was my duty,” said retired judge U D Salvi at `Solidarity With Bilkis Bano’, an event organized by `United Against Injustice and Discrimination’.
“The state has the right to grant remission. It’s a power given to the state under law,” Salvi said, adding that he can not comment on the decision to release the convicts prematurely as he had not seen the relevant reports and did not know what factors were considered. “But their felicitation (by some people) was in absolute bad taste. The convicts themselves should not have accepted felicitation,” Salvi said to a question by reporters.
Eleven convicts walked out of Godhra sub-jail after the Gujarat government allowed their release on August 15 this year. The trial was shifted to Mumbai by the Supreme Court in 2004 after Bano claimed that she was receiving threats.
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The remission granted by the Gujarat government to the convicts has been challenged before the Supreme Court. After violence erupted following the burning of a Sabarmati Express coach that killed 59 ‘karsevaks ‘on February 27, 2002, Bilkis Bano, who was five months pregnant then, fled her village with her toddler daughter and 15 others. On March 3, they took shelter in a field when a mob of 20-30 people attacked them. Bano was gang raped while seven members of her family were killed.