Hyderabad: Hours after declaring all the accused "not guilty" in the high profile Mecca Masjid blast case of 2007, a judge in Hyderabad handed in his resignation.
Judge Ravinder Reddy, who delivered the verdict in the 11-year-old case on Monday afternoon, stunned everyone by resigning on the same day. He has reportedly cited personal reasons. He handed over his resignation to the Metropolitan Sessions Judge. According to news agency PTI, Judge Reddy said his decision had nothing to do with today's judgement and he had been considering resigning for quite some time.
In his order earlier in the day, he said all five men had been acquitted because the National Investigation Agency (NIA) had failed to establish their role in the attack in which nine people were killed and over 50 injured during Friday prayers at the historic mosque. In 11 years, over 200 witnesses were examined by the court and over 400 documents were exhibited.
Swami Aseemanand, a monk and former Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) member who has been linked to three terror attacks, was among those acquitted in the case.
Hyderabad lawmaker Asaduddin Owaisi raised questions and called it an "intriguing" move. Ten people allegedly belonging to right wing organisations had been named as the accused. One of them, Sunil Joshi, a former RSS member like Aseemanand, was murdered.
The acquittals today were seized by the BJP, which taunted the Congress saying it had been proved that there is "no such thing as saffron terror". The term was used in 2010 by then home minister P Chidambaram of the Congress.
But the Congress said neither its president Rahul Gandhi nor any other party leader ever used the term "saffron terror".
Judge Ravinder Reddy, who delivered the verdict in the 11-year-old case on Monday afternoon, stunned everyone by resigning on the same day. He has reportedly cited personal reasons. He handed over his resignation to the Metropolitan Sessions Judge. According to news agency PTI, Judge Reddy said his decision had nothing to do with today's judgement and he had been considering resigning for quite some time.
Justice Reddy had earlier said the National Investigation Agency had failed to prove anyone's guilt.
Hyderabad lawmaker Asaduddin Owaisi raised questions and called it an "intriguing" move.
Advertisement
But the Congress said neither its president Rahul Gandhi nor any other party leader ever used the term "saffron terror".
Advertisement
COMMENTS
Advertisement
In Mecca Masjid Case, Aseemanand's Confession "Not Voluntary", Says Court BJP May Rope In Swami Aseemanand To Work In West Bengal In Collapsed Mecca Masjid Case, Main Prosecutor Has ABVP Connection 2 French Rafale Jets Collide Mid-Air, Instructor, Pilot Missing "Pivotal Moment": Key Doctor Body Resumes Strike 2 Days After Calling It Off Ayatollah Khamenei Warns Of "Divine Wrath" If Iran Backs Down Against Israel Monkeypox Virus Killed 548 People In This Nation Since Start Of 2024 Tiger Attacks 5 After Escaping From Rajasthan's Sariska Tiger Reserve This US City Has Been Declared America's Least Desirable, Survey Finds Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.