mumbai attacks video
But with feelings still running high after the 60-hour assault on India’s financial and entertainment capital, the Mumbai Metropolitan Magistrate Court’s Bar Association has resolved not to represent the 21-year-old Pakistani. Others who say they would represent him have been publicly condemned as unpatriotic and in one case, activists of a Hindu nationalist political party ransacked an advocate’s home.
Rights groups say that if no lawyer comes forward, Iman — who faces a potential death sentence if convicted — will be denied a fair trial, putting the world’s biggest democracy in breach of domestic and international law. “Everybody has a right to be represented” during questioning and at trial, said Meenakshi Ganguly, from Human Rights Watch in Mumbai.
“The presumption of innocence and the right to representation is the most basic of human rights,” she told. The 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which India ratified, enshrines the presumption of innocence until proven guilty in a court of law at which the defendant “has had all the guarantees necessary for his defence”.
India’s own constitution also provides for the right to legal aid and representation, as well as a “fair, just and equitable procedure” in court for any defendant, regardless of whether they are a foreign national.
But the honorary secretary of the Bombay Bar Association, M.P. Rao, said the unprecedented nature of the attacks — blamed on the banned Pakistan-based Islamist group Lashkar-e-Taiba — meant normal rules should not apply.
“He (Iman) has waged war on the country. If he’s waged war, the basic requirement of giving him a fair trial doesn’t really become justified,” he told AFP. “So, the majority of our bar members are of the view that he could be tried without anybody representing him on the basis of circumstantial evidence that’s available.”
Rao says the door is still open for a foreign lawyer, possibly from Pakistan, to represent Iman as there is “unchallengeable proof” he comes from India’s neighbour and rival. But his comments fit the public mood. A letter in the Midday tabloid here Wednesday described as “ridiculous” an Indian Supreme Court ruling that it is illegal to deny a defendant the lawyer of his choice.
“How can one defend the indefensible? These loopholes in the system should be plugged immediately… He (Iman) should not be given the right to defend himself in court,” the correspondent wrote.
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