The Supreme Court had delivered its verdict in the Uphaar cinema tragedy last year.
Quick Take
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59 people choked to death June 13 ,1997 in a fire in Uphaar theatre
In 2015, top court reduced the jail term of Ansal brothers
Top Court allowed review petition this year but it is yet to be taken up
"I would have been a grandmother by now," said Neelam Krishnamoorthy, who who lost her two children aged 15 and 17 in the fire and heads the Association of Victims of Uphaar Tragedy or AVUT which is leading the legal against the builders of the cinema - Sushil and Gopal Ansal.
Last year on August 19, the Supreme Court had imposed a fine of Rs 30 crore each on the Ansal brothers and held that their jail terms be reduced to the term already undergone by them if they pay the fine, considering their old age.
Sushil Ansal had spent five months and 20 days in jail while Gopal Ansal spent four months and 20 days in 2008.

Neelam Krishnamoorthy heads the victims' group that is leading the legal battle in the Uphaar case.
"We will contribute and build the centre," said Ms Krishnamoorthy, about the Rs 60 crore-fine that is to be used to build a trauma centre. "Please help us recover from our trauma first," she said.
And while the Supreme Court allowed an open hearing of the review petition on the January 6 this year, it has still not been taken up. AVUT says it has since then also mentioned the matter in the court of the Chief Justice of India twice.
The Uphaar victims say it's a shame that 19 years on, their fight for legal closure continues. They hope that when they mark the 20th anniversary of the tragedy next year, they can think more on emotional closure than the legal battle ahead.
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