CRI
Lawyers Step in to Help Riot Victims
Hyderabad,
Andhra Pradesh, Mar. 11, 2010, 12:00 Hrs (UCAN):
A
group of Religious lawyers will step in to try and improve conviction
rates in anti-Christian riot cases in the eastern state of Orissa.
Representatives
of the Forum of Religious Lawyers for Kandhamal (FRLK) will help
victims appeal to the Supreme Court to reopen 11 murders cases
handled by two fast track courts in Orissa, said forum head Monfort
Brother Varghese Theckanath.
Flawed
investigation and a lack of expert legal help were to blame for
the high rate of acquittals, Brother Theckanath said.
The
Religious lawyers formed the forum after they came together Feb.
25-28 in Hyderabad, southern Andhra Pradesh.
The
54 members, all priests, brothers or nuns, have agreed to spend
time in Kandhamal, the epicenter of violence, to provide legal
help to victims, Brother Theckanath said.
Five
representavies of the forum concluded a two-day meeting with Archbishop
Raphael Cheenath of Cuttack-Bhubaneswar to finalize plans March
10.
The
meeting was initiated by Montfort Social Institute in that city
and Pune-based Streevani, a Church-run center for women’s
empowerment.
The
seven weeks of rioting and violence against Christians in 2008
resulted in 3,232 complaints by victims.
Police
have filed 831 cases for investigation. The investigations of
some 120 cases have been completed and sent for trial.
By
February end the courts have closed some 60 cases, convicting
a total of 89 persons and acquitting 251 people, the Religious
lawyers said in a statement.
They
plan to work with other groups to appeal to the Supreme Court
to “stay all criminal proceedings” of riot cases and
to re-open and re-investigate all cases.
“We
propose appointing a leading criminal lawyer each” in the
district, state and Supreme courts,” the brother said.
They
also want to approach the National Human Rights Commission and
National Women’s Commission to ensure justice for victims,
he added.
Some
90 people were killed and 50,000 displaced in the riots. The state
government, however, says only 42 were killed and lists the rest
as “missing” because their bodies have not yet been
found. |