The Congress is set to file a fresh review plea in Supreme Court challenging the decision to release six convicts in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case. According to a senior Congress leader, the petition will be filed in the next 3-4 days. The Congress had termed the top court order ‘totally unacceptable’ and ‘completely erroneous’. It had also stated that the convicts have been released from the prison and not acquitted, and should not be seen as ‘heroes’.
On November 11, the apex court had ordered the release of six convicts including Nalini Sriharan and RP Ravichandran. This came months after the Supreme Court had granted bail to a convict AG Perarivalan on May 18. Then, the court had invoked its extraordinary powers under Article 142 of the constitution to release him on grounds of poor health and good conduct. The SC’s reasoning in the release of six convicts had mirrored the one during Perarivalan’s release.
Perarivalan, Nalini Sriharan, Murugan alias Sriharan, Santhan, RP Ravichandran, Robert Payas and S Jayakumar were arrested in 1991. Four of them, including Nalini’s husband Sriharan happen to be Sri Lankan nationals.
On May 21, 1991, Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated at Tamil Nadu’s Sriperumbudur by a woman suicide bomber of Sri Lanka’s Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) during the Lok Sabha poll campaign. The killing was largely seen as a brutal fallout of his decision to send over 1,000 Indian forces to the island nation in 1987 to disarm the Tamil rebels.