
Aimim Aimim Assaddin Owaisi asked 21 July whether the government would take steps against Maharashtra ATS officers (the anti -terrorist group) who investigated the case of the train 7/11 in 2006 after the Bombay High Court freed all 12 accused.
The judgment of the Supreme Court in Mumbai came almost ten years after the special court granted convicted sentences and life sentences.
“12 Muslim men were in prison for 18 years for a crime they did not commit. Their main life is gone. 180 families who lost their loved ones have a few injured for them. Will the government take steps against Maharashtra ATS officers who investigated this case?” Hyderabad Member asked in the post of X.
The bench of justice Anil Kilor and Justice Shyam Chandak noted that “Prosecutions have failed to determine the case above reasonable doubts,” said the statutory news website and bench.
The court found a statement to almost all witnesses of the prosecution of unreliable. The court reportedly stated that there was no reason why taxi or people would remember the accused after almost 100 days of explosion.
“Innocent people are sent to prison and then, a few years later, when they are released from prison, there is no possibility of reconstruction of their lives. Over the past 17 years, these charges are in prison. They have not escaped. Most of their first -class life is gone.
What’s that?
On the evening of July 11, 2006, the bomb explosions occurred at seven different places on local trains in Mumbai in just 11 minutes. In the incident, 189 people in the explosion came, while more than 827 passengers were injured.
The bombs were placed in the first -class trains from Churchgate. They exploded near Matunga Road, Mahim Junction, Bandra, Khar, Yogeshwari, Bhayandar and Borivali. In 2015, the Court condemned 12 people in the case of explosions.
The indictment was filed in the case of November 2006. Then in 2015 the court sentenced 12 accused. Of these, 5 were sentenced to death, while 7 was devoted to life imprisonment.
(Tagstotranslate) train black black in Mumbai