New DelhiOne of the four convicts, Akshay Kumar Singh, moved the Supreme Court Tuesday seeking review of its 2017 judgement handing down the death penalty to all of them in the sensational Nirbhaya gang rape and murder case, saying "the executions only kill criminal, not the crime".
The 23-year-old paramedic student was brutally gang-raped on the intervening night of December 16-17, 2012 inside a running bus in South Delhi by six persons and severely assaulted before being thrown out on the road. She succumbed to injuries on December 29, 2012, at Mount Elizabeth Hospital in Singapore.
Akshay, 33, who had not filed the review plea earlier with other three convicts, has now moved the apex court with the petition through his lawyer A P Singh and fervently pleaded against his possible execution.
"The state must not simply execute people to prove that it is attacking terror or violence against women. It must persistently work towards systematic reforms to being about change. Executions only kill the criminal, not the crime...," the review plea said.
The top court, in July 9 last year, had dismissed the review pleas by Mukesh (30), Pawan Gupta (23) and Vinay Sharma (24) in the case, saying no grounds have been made out by them for review of the 2017 verdict.
The apex court in its 2017 verdict had upheld the capital punishment awarded to them by the Delhi High Court and the trial court in the case of gang rape and murder of the woman here.
Akshay, presently lodged in a jail here, has said in his plea that the death penalty entails "cold-blooded killing" and it does not provide the chance to reformation to convicts.
The plea referred to the moral reasons for the abolition of the death penalty and said that there was no evidence to show that such a punishment has got a deterrent value.
Read:| All Nirbhaya convicts now in Tihar jail; speculation rife about their hanging
"If our criminal justice system cannot guarantee the consistent application of legal standards and the rule of law, then, how can we allow the judiciary to decide as to who should live or die," it said.
The plea, strangely, talked about the health risks such as rising pollution level in Delhi and said,"Life is going short to short, then why death penalty."
The plea also talked about the life span of human beings in the present age and said that there was no reason to continue with the death penalty.
"Why death penalty? When age is reducing, it is mentioned in our 'Ved', 'Purans' and 'Upanishads' that in the age of 'Satyug' people lived the life of a thousand years. In the age of 'Dwapar' they used to live for hundreds of the years But not it is 'Kalyug', in this era, the age of human beings have reduced much. It has now come to 50-60 years, and rarely we listen of a person who is the age of 100 years.
"Very few people reach up to the age of 80-90 years. This is almost a very true analysis. When we look around us then we come to the conclusion, more or less this analysis is true when a person faces the stark realities of life and passes through the adverse situation, then he is no better than a dead body..."
One of the accused in the case, Ram Singh, had allegedly committed suicide in the Tihar Jail here.
A juvenile, who was among the accused, was convicted by a juvenile justice board. He was released from a reformation home after serving a three-year term.
So far as legal remedies are concerned, the three convicts, except Akshaya, can still file curative pleas in the top court against their conviction and death penalty in the case.
After exhausting the remedy of filing curative pleas, the convicts can still move the President with their mercy pleas and in case of their (mercy pleas) dismissal, the authorities can seek issuance of death warrant from a local curt to execute them.
Read:| The curious case of Nirbhaya convict Vinay Sharma's mercy petition