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Terrorist convicted in Batla House shoot-out

Published: 26 Jul 2013 - 02:12 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 01:27 pm

New Delhi: An Indian Mujahideen operative was yesterday held guilty by a Delhi court in the 2008 Batla House shoot-out here, and the family of the police inspector who was killed as well as political leaders hailed the verdict.

Finance Minister P Chidambaram, who earlier was the home minister, said he was glad that the “police have been able to prove their case”, and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) stressed it was a boost to anti-terror forces.

Additional Sessions Judge Rajender Kumar Shastri convicted Shahzad Ahmad for killing Inspector M C Sharma and fixed July 29 for arguments on sentencing.

Ahmad, from Azamgarh in Uttar Pradesh, was said to be present in a flat in Batla House neighbourhood in Jamia Nagar area in south Delhi when the shoot-out took place.

The exchange of fire on September 19, 2008 took place between a seven-member Delhi Police Special Cell team, led by Sharma, and suspected Indian Mujahideen terrorists, who were allegedly involved in the September 13, 2008, serial blasts in Delhi that killed 26 people.

The police filed the charge sheet against Ahmad on April 28, 2010 and the prosecution examined around 70 witnesses, including six eyewitnesses who were part of the police raid team.

Sharma’s family expressed satisfaction over the verdict.

His octogenarian father, Naurottam Sharma, said: “I am satisfied with the court’s decision, but await the final judgment. I am worried that the accused can move the higher court.”

Jamia Teachers Solidarity Association expressed its disappointment at the verdict, and said it would approach a higher court to seek justice for Ahmad.

“It was a huge disappointment for us. We will definitely approach the higher court for justice,” said Manisha Sethi, president of the association.

Chidambaram told a TV channel: “I am glad that the police have been able to prove their case.”

Asked about comments made by his Congress party colleagues like Digvijaya Singh, who had feared the shoot-out was fake, Chidambaram said: “They (leaders) meant well. They were reflecting the views of the affected families or the people who lived in the area.”

“Earlier, the NHRC (National Human rights Commission) and the high court also held that there was no reason to doubt the genuineness of the encounter,” he said.

The BJP said the conviction of Ahmad will go a long way in boosting the morale of the security forces fighting terror.

“There was a consistent campaign by several political parties, including the Congress, to declare it (shoot-out) fake... this verdict will go a long way in upholding the morale of those police officers fighting terror,” BJP spokesperson Ravi Shankar Prasad said.

IANS