Sanjay Dutt to stay behind bars
Actor to continue serving sentence after pardon plea rejected
MUMBAI:
With Maharashtra Governor CV Rao rejecting a plea for pardon, incarcerated Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt will continue to serve the remainder of his sentence at a Pune jail, said official sources.
The governor rejected a plea by former retired Supreme Court judge, Justice Markandey Katju in March 2013. “On September 15, Governor Rao declined the appeal and has forwarded his recommendation to the state government for further action,” stated an official, declining to be identified.
While rejecting the pardon plea, the governor adhered to the state home ministry’s advice, on — among others — grounds that it could set a wrong precedent.
In his plea, Justice Katju had sought a pardon for Dutt on grounds that he was not a terrorist, and also demanded pardon for another elderly co-convict Zaibunissa Kazi.
Earlier, Dutt had himself declared that he would not seek pardon from any quarter and abide by the Supreme Court verdict sending him to jail to serve the remainder of his five-year term at Yerawada Central Jail (YCJ), Pune.
According to current indications, Dutt is likely to complete his sentence and walk out of prison by the year-end or early 2016. He was convicted for his role in the March 12, 1993 Mumbai serial blasts and after his arrest in 1996, had spent 18 months in jail before getting bail.
In 2013, he was sentenced to five years imprisonment and was transferred to the YCJ for serving the remaining prison term of 42 months.
In the interim, he was out four times on parole on various grounds and is currently released on furlough since August 27 for his daughter’s medical problems.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 25th, 2015.
With Maharashtra Governor CV Rao rejecting a plea for pardon, incarcerated Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt will continue to serve the remainder of his sentence at a Pune jail, said official sources.
The governor rejected a plea by former retired Supreme Court judge, Justice Markandey Katju in March 2013. “On September 15, Governor Rao declined the appeal and has forwarded his recommendation to the state government for further action,” stated an official, declining to be identified.
While rejecting the pardon plea, the governor adhered to the state home ministry’s advice, on — among others — grounds that it could set a wrong precedent.
In his plea, Justice Katju had sought a pardon for Dutt on grounds that he was not a terrorist, and also demanded pardon for another elderly co-convict Zaibunissa Kazi.
Earlier, Dutt had himself declared that he would not seek pardon from any quarter and abide by the Supreme Court verdict sending him to jail to serve the remainder of his five-year term at Yerawada Central Jail (YCJ), Pune.
According to current indications, Dutt is likely to complete his sentence and walk out of prison by the year-end or early 2016. He was convicted for his role in the March 12, 1993 Mumbai serial blasts and after his arrest in 1996, had spent 18 months in jail before getting bail.
In 2013, he was sentenced to five years imprisonment and was transferred to the YCJ for serving the remaining prison term of 42 months.
In the interim, he was out four times on parole on various grounds and is currently released on furlough since August 27 for his daughter’s medical problems.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 25th, 2015.