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Two Uphaar cinema employees move HC against conviction

A Uphaar cinema manager and a gatekeeper moved the Delhi High Court against a lower court verdict holding them guilty of 'culpable homicide'.

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NEW DELHI: A Uphaar cinema manager and a gatekeeper, undergoing seven years' jail term in the 1997 fire case, on Tuesday moved the Delhi High Court against a lower court verdict holding them guilty of 'culpable homicide'.
    
Justice H R Malhotra, admitting the appeals of manager Ajit Chowdhary and gatekeeper Manmohan Unniyal, issued notice to the CBI and sought its response by January 30.
    
The court, however, refused to suspend their jail term and said "such orders cannot be passed without hearing the other party (CBI)."
    
According to the CBI, Unniyal, who was manning the cinema hall's balcony gate at the time of blaze that broke out on June 13 1997, fled from the spot without unbolting the exit doors, locking several helpless victims inside.
    
Fifty-nine cinegoers died of asphyxia and over hundred people received injuries in the subsequent stampede, it said.
    
Chaudhary, convicted manager, was managing the day-to-day affairs of the the theatre, the probe agency said.
    
The court of Additional Sessions Judge Mamta Sehgal, on November 20, had convicted all the 12 accused, including theatre owners, Sushil and Gopal Ansal, under various provisions of the IPC.
    
Seven convicts-- Radha Krishan Sharma, N S Chopra, Ajit Chowdhary (Uphaar managers), Manmohan Unniyal (cinema's gatekeeper), Brij Mohan Satija, A K Gera and Bir Singh (all
DVB officials-- were handed down seven years' term as they were held guilty under section 304 part II (culpable homicide not amounting to murder) of the IPC.
    
While the Ansal brothers and three others were sentenced to two years' term under section 304A (criminal negligence causing death) of the IPC.
    
Earlier, the High Court had suspended the two-years imprisonment sentence awarded to the Ansal brothers, by granting bail to them till the disposal of their appeals.
    
Meanwhile, the court today deferred to January 25 the hearing on Association of Victims of Uphaar Tragedy seeking harsher punishment for convicted theatre owners, Sushil and Gopal Ansal.
    
The decision on the Ansal brothers' plea for release of their passports was deferred by the trial court till the case file was returned from the High Court, which is presently hearing a batch of appeals filed by convicts.

 

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