Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Tuesday, September 04, 2012
In India, Former BJP Official and 30 Others Sentenced In 2002 Gujarat Hindu-Muslim Riots
Time reports that last Friday, in the Indian state of Gujarat a special court sentenced Maya Kodnani, the former state minister for women and child development, to 28 years in prison for her role in the 2002 Naroda Patiya massacre during which Hindus killed 96 Muslims as part of widespread Hindu-Muslim violence following the firebombing of a train carrying Hindu pilgrims. Thirty other defendants were sentenced to life in prison in connection with the massacre. (See prior related posting.) According to the Business Standard, the court found that Kodnani was one of the principal conspirators and that she played a role in instigating the Hindu mobs. In its 1,969 page judgment, the court said: "This court firmly believes that had the instigation not been done by A-37 (Maya Kodnani), had the offence not been abetted by her, the communal riots would not have spread at Naroda Patiya on such large scale." Kodnani has been an important member of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which is the ruling party in Gujarat and the main opposition party in India's central government. However BJP leaders distanced the party from her after the verdict, pointing out that in 2002 when the riots took place she was a state legislator, not a cabinet minister. She was made a minister subsequently.