VELLORE, India — The last co-conspirators jailed for the 1991 assassination of former Indian
prime minister Rajiv Gandhi walked out of prison on Saturday, a day after the
country’s Supreme Court ordered their release.
اضافة اعلان
Gandhi, 46, was killed by a woman suicide bomber at
an election rally in the southern state of
Tamil Nadu in a plot by the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a Sri Lankan armed separatist group.
India’s apex
court allowed the release of the six convicts, citing their “satisfactory
conduct” in prison and the fact that they had already served over three decades
behind bars.
Three of the six — Nalini Sriharan, her husband
Murugan, and Santhan — walked out of two prisons in Vellore, about 140km from
the regional capital Chennai, according to an AFP journalist at the scene.
Santhan and Murugan were driven away to a camp for
Sri Lankan refugees soon after their release.
Local media said the others — Robert Pais, Jaikumar,
and Ravichandran — walked out of prisons in Chennai and the city of Madurai in
the same state.
Three of the six convicts released on Saturday had
initially been condemned to death before their sentences were commuted.
Gandhi became India’s youngest prime minister after
his mother and predecessor, Indira Gandhi, was assassinated by her Sikh
bodyguards in 1984.
The family’s Congress party dominated Indian
politics for decades, and Rajiv’s widow Sonia remains the organization’s most
powerful figure, while their son Rahul, 52, is seen as the main challenger to
Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Rajiv’s killing was seen as a response to his move
to send Indian forces to Sri Lanka in 1987 to disarm the Tamil rebels.
New Delhi lost more than 1,000 men against the well-entrenched rebels before it
withdrew its troops.
The Congress party has condemned the court’s
decision as “totally unacceptable” and “completely erroneous”.
“It is most unfortunate that the Supreme Court has
not acted in consonance with the spirit of India on this issue,” the party
said, tweeting a statement by senior member Jairam Ramesh.
India has a significant Tamil population of its own,
and state governments in Tamil Nadu have repeatedly called for the convicts to
be freed.
Earlier this year, the court freed AG Perarivalan —
another convict involved in the assassination who had previously faced
execution — with the state’s current chief minister MK Stalin, a key Congress
ally, hugging him after his release.
Gandhi’s son has over the years spoken about how he
and his sister Priyanka had forgiven their father’s killers.
“We were very upset and hurt, and for many years we
were quite angry,” the Indian Express newspaper quoted Rahul as saying in 2018.
But they had since forgiven them, he said, “in fact, completely”.
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