Mumbai bomber Yakub Memon hanged after long battle for mercy...
Yakub
Memon was hanged at a prison in the western state of Maharashtra at
around 6.30 a.m. local time, Indian Home Ministry spokesman Kuldeep
Dhatwalia told CNN Thursday.
In the
hours before the execution was carried out, a group of prominent lawyers
contacted India's chief justice to seek a postponement of Memon's
hanging for two weeks -- a day after Indian President Pranab Mukherjee
rejected a final plea for mercy. They argued this was the minimum period
of time required between the final appeal and execution.
In
an unprecedented move, the Supreme Court held a special early-morning
session to discuss the request before rejecting it, Dhatwalia said.
Memom died on his 53rd birthday.
He
was originally sentenced to death in 2007 as a key conspirator behind
12 blasts that ripped through several hotels, marketplaces and buildings
in Mumbai on March 12, 1993.
According
to the Indian prosecution team, those assaults were ordered by the
local underworld in revenge for the demolition of a 16th century mosque
in northern India by Hindu zealots.
The mosque's destruction triggered a wave of religious violence that left hundreds dead.
'Cold blood'
Meanwhile, Amnesty International has condemned India's use of the death penalty as a symbol of its resolve to tackle crime.
"This
morning, the Indian government essentially killed a man in cold blood
to show that killing is wrong," Aakar Patel, Executive Director, Amnesty
International India, said in a statement.
"This
execution will not deliver justice for the 1993 Mumbai blasts. It is a
misguided attempt to prevent terrorism, and a disappointing use of the
criminal justice system as a tool for retribution."
In
2006, popular Bollywood star Sanjay Dutt was also convicted of
acquiring illegal weapons tied to the Mumbai bombings. He was, however,
cleared of a more serious charge of conspiracy in the attacks.
Public
Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam said 100 of 123 suspects were convicted for
their roles in the bombings, one of the longest-running trials of a
terrorism case in the country.
Memon
was among 11 prisoners sentenced to death by the trial court. The other
10 appealed their sentences, which were commuted to life in jail in
2013.
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